Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 90South Africa
Henson v MEC for Transport and Public Works, Western Cape Government (19918/2013) [2023] ZAWCHC 90 (18 April 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Henson v MEC for Transport and Public Works, Western Cape Government (19918/2013) [2023] ZAWCHC 90 (18 April 2023)
Henson v MEC for Transport and Public Works, Western Cape Government (19918/2013) [2023] ZAWCHC 90 (18 April 2023)
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sino date 18 April 2023
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Delict – Potholes – Plaintiff’s
car hitting pothole and rolling – Numerous
injuries
including degloving of arm – Department had a legal duty to
repair potholes along that road –Road was
in such a bad
state that plaintiff could not avoid the pothole that caused the
accident – No evidence of contributory
negligence –
Department 100% liable.
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 19918/2013
In
the matter between:
DESTINY
TASHMEEN HENSON
Plaintiff
and
THE
MEC FOR TRANSPORT AND PUBLIC WORKS,
WESTERN
CAPE GOVERNMENT
Defendant
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
18 APRIL 2023
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 10 December 2010, in the evening, the plaintiff was the driver and
registered owner
of a maroon Ford Escort bearing registration number
C[…]. She and her passenger, Mr Otto, was travelling
along the
R311 between Hopefield and Moorreesburg, in an easterly
direction.
2.
The plaintiff, according to her evidence, encountered numerous
potholes in the roadway.
She attempted to avoid and safely
navigated most of them, travelling at an average speed of 50km to
60km per hour. Suddenly,
however, her vehicle dipped into a
pothole. This caused her to lose control and the car rolled and
came to a standstill along
the Patrysvlei Farm, a farm belonging to a
Mr Bester.
3.
As a result of the accident, the plaintiff suffered numerous
injuries, including a
severe degloving injury to her right arm,
associated with an ulna nerve injury. The injuries are detailed
in the particulars
of claim and the expert reports filed of record.
The
plaintiff’s claims
4.
The plaintiff claims delictual damages from the defendant arising
from the injuries
suffered as a result of the accident. The
issues of liability and
quantum
were separated at the
commencement of the trial. What is at issue at this stage is
therefore only whether the defendant is
liable to the plaintiff on
any of the grounds set out in the particulars of claim.
5.
The plaintiff bears the onus in respect of all the elements of the
delict (see, for
example,
Van der Merwe v MEC Public Works, Road
and Transport and another
[2019] ZAFSHC 6
(28 February 2019) at
para [16]). Thus, to succeed with her claim, the plaintiff must
prove all the elements of the delict
(having alleged them in her
pleadings), namely (1) conduct on the part of the defendant, either,
in the form of a commission (i.e.,
a voluntary human act) or an
omission (the failure to take positive steps to prevent harm to
another where there is a legal duty
to act), (2) the wrongfulness of
that conduct, (3) fault in the form of negligence (or intent),
(4) harm suffered by the
plaintiff and (5) a causal connection
between the harm and the defendant's conduct.
6.
The onus of
proof is to be discharged on a balance of probabilities. What
the Court does is to draw inferences from the proven
facts. The
inference drawn is the most probable, though not necessarily the
only, inference to be drawn (see
Cooper
and another v Merchant Trade Finances
2000
(3) SA 1009
(SCA)
at 1027F-1028D).
7.
As the overarching basis for her claims, the plaintiff avers that a
legal duty rests
on the defendant to take all reasonable steps to
ensure the safety of the plaintiff and other road users, particularly
those using
the R311 between Moorreesburg and Hopefield. She
alleges that the defendant breached his legal duty and that such
breach
resulted in the accident and, as a result, the damages that
she suffered.
8.
It is common cause that, pursuant to the provisions of section 7 of
the Roads Ordinance
No. 19 of 1976 ("the Ordinance"), the
defendant has a duty to construct and maintain the R311, which is
under his control.
The defendant admits (both in his plea and by way
of the evidence of his witness Mr Schoeman, discussed below) that the
R311 falls
under his direct control. The R311 is a public road and
vests in the defendant. The Ordinance has, since the date of
the
collision, been repealed by the Western Cape Transport
Infrastructure Act, 2013. In terms of section 2(1) of the Act,
the
defendant “
must finance, manage, regulate, upgrade,
protect and rehabilitate provincial transport infrastructure, and all
rights and obligations
attached to such infrastructure vest in [the
defendant]”
.
9.
The grounds of negligence upon which the plaintiff relies are, in the
main, that the
defendant (through his employees) failed:
9.1
To maintain the R311 in a safe condition; to repair or fill the
potholes; and to effect repairs
and maintenance to the road to ensure
that it was in a safe and usable condition;
9.2
To provide adequate signage to ensure that members of the public,
including the plaintiff, were
made aware of the danger posed by the
potholes;
9.3
To ensure that regular or sufficient patrols were undertaken to
ensure the_ plaintiff's safety
from hazards of the type created by
the potholes;
9.4
To exercise reasonable care to prevent the plaintiff from driving
through or into the pothole,
when it was his legal duty to do so;
9.5
To take reasonable or adequate steps to avoid, by the exercise of
reasonable care, the injuries
suffered by the plaintiff;
9.6
To have taken proper safety precautions to ensure the safety of all
road users, in particular
the plaintiff.
10.
The evidence led in support of these allegations will be dealt with
below.
The
application for a postponement
11.
There was, at the outset of the trial, an application by the
defendant for a postponement so as formally
to qualify his witness,
Mr Schoeman, as an expert. The application was opposed by the
plaintiff. It appeared from the
affidavit in support of the
application, however, that Mr Schoeman was not in a position to give
any expert evidence in the matter.
The high-water mark of his
evidence would, according to the affidavit, be as follows: “..
I will have to deal with the RMT contract which were concluded in
2010 with the external service provides to establish the scope
and
extent of the work performed on public road MR231 [R311]). I
will also require network level information from pavement
management
systems to ascertain the capital works that were done, and the costs
involved. … In addition, the extent to which
the maintenance
programme covered public road MR231, in particular, the area where
the alleged accident occurred. The costs
of repairs, the
patrols conducted including the costs of repairing a pothole, at the
time of the information is available
”.
12.
This evidence, as was borne out by the evidence that Mr Schoeman was
in fact able to give at the trial,
was purely factual. There
was no need to qualify him as an expert witness.
13.
The application for a postponement was accordingly dismissed, with
costs, and the trial proceeded.
The
defendant’s defences
14.
As indicated, the defendant admits that the road between Moorreesburg
and Hopefield is a public road,
the ownership of which vests in the
defendant. The defendant denies, however, that he or his
employees were negligent in
any way, and pleads that the road was at
all relevant times suitable for or conducive to reasonable, proper
and optimal vehicular
use. The defendant denies that it
"owed
a
duty of care to the Plaintiff either on 10 December 2010 or
at all.
"
15.
The defendant pleads that it took various steps to ensure that the
existence of potholes or any other
defects on the public road were
brought to his attention. Those steps included routine
patrolling on the public road and
the inspection of the road surface
by, amongst others, technicians. The defendant contends
further that, in 2010, maintenance
work was performed by external
contractors in terms of agreements between the defendant and
sub-contractors. Such maintenance
work included patching
“
and/or
” the resealing of defects on the road
surface, “
and/or
” the filling the road surface, as
well as attending to the normal wear and tear of the public road.
16.
The defendant avers that the collision was caused by the plaintiff’s
own negligence, or that there
was contributory negligence in her
part. The defendant bears the onus in this respect (see
Van
der Merwe supra
at para [17]) to prove that, as pleaded, she:
16.1
Failed to keep a proper lookout;
16.2
Failed to avoid any hazard on the public road when she could and
should have done so;
16.3
Drove the vehicle while she was not able to or capable of doing so;
16.4
Drove at an excessive speed in the prevailing circumstances;
16.5
Failed properly to control the vehicle when she could and should have
done so;
16.6
Failed, in circumstances where she could or should have done so, to
maintain a proper lookout for,
inter alia,
pothole warnings
signs; uneven road warnings signs and speed restriction warnings
signs adjacent to the public road;
16.7
Failed at all material times to act with due and proper care when
using the public road;
16.8
Failed to apply the brakes of the vehicle in circumstances where she
should or could have done so;
and
16.9
Increased the speed of the vehicle after it had left the tarmac road
surface of the public road whilst
it was unsafe to do so.
17.
The defendant pleads, essentially, that the plaintiff failed to avoid
the accident, in circumstances
where she should or could have done so
by the exercise of reasonable care and skill. In this respect,
the defendant referred
to what was stated in
Minister of Transport
NO and another v Du Toit and another
2007 (1) SA 322
(SCA) at
para [17] as regards the responsibilities of a driver:
"A
driver of
a
vehicle is obliged to maintain
a
proper
lookout. He (she) must pay attention to what is happening around him
or her, but most important of
all, he
must
as
far
as
possible keep his eyes on the road,
particularly at night when his vision is limited. Depending on the
state of the traffic and
the nature of the road, and the speed at
which he
or she
is
travelling,
the
opportunity which
a
motorist has to
read and comprehend the import of each sign may be extremely limited.
Indeed, it is not uncommon for even
a
competent and cautious
driver to miss-rate or fail to react to
a road sign.
For this reason, it is imperative, particularly in unlit areas, for
warnings and other signs to be clear, unambiguous,
and appropriately
positioned
so
that, if necessary, they may be read and
comprehend at a glance."
18.
I shall return to whether the defendant has succeeded in discharging
this onus.
The
general immunity relied upon by the defendant
19.
The defendant raises a general immunity pursuant to section 60 of the
Ordinance. Section 60 provides
as follows:
“
60.
Actions for damages in certain circumstances.
(1)
No action shall lie against a road
authority or any employee, agent or contractor of a road authority
for or in respect of any damage
or injury sustained or alleged to
have been sustained by any person-
(a)
in using any part of a public road or public path other than the
roadway of a public road
;
(b)
in using a
public road or public path merely by reason of the fact
that such road authority has contributed towards the costs of
construction,
repair, improvement or maintenance
of such road or
path, or
(c)
as a result of the exercise of the powers contemplated by section 59.
(2)
If a person uses a public road for bona fide trekking with stock no
action shall lie in
respect of damage caused by such stock within a
distance of forty-five metres from the boundary of such road on any
side thereof
on which it is not fenced, and such stock shall not be
liable to be impounded while within such distance and for the
purposes hereof
a person shall not be deemed to have used a public
road for the bona fide trekking with stock unless such trek was
completed within
twenty-four hours after its commencement, or unless
during any twenty-four hours during which the trek lasted, a distance
of at
least ten kilometres in the case of small stock and twenty
kilometres in the case of large stock, was covered in the same
direction
.” [Emphasis added.]
20.
The defendant says that section 60(1)(a), read with (b), provides it
with an indemnity against the plaintiff’s
claim. Section
60(1)(a) is substantially repeated in section 59(1)(a) of the Act in
the following terms (section 60(1)(b) is not
reproduced in the Act):
“
(1)
A responsible authority or any if its agents or employees or
officials, or any person who operates
or has constructed transport
infrastructure, is not liable in respect of damage or loss suffered
by a person-
(a)
through the use of that part of transport infrastructure not intended
or constructed for
the use of vehicles;…
”
21.
The defence has no merit, because the plaintiff was, on the
undisputed evidence, not using any part
of the public road other than
the roadway on the day of the accident. She was not using any
part of the road not intended
for the use of vehicles. It was
only as a result of, on her evidence, the striking of the pothole in
the roadway that her
vehicle left the roadway. Section 60(1)(a)
is therefore of no assistance to the defendant.
22.
As to section 60(1)(b), the plaintiff does not seek to hold the
defendant responsible merely by reason
of the fact that the defendant
has contributed towards the costs of construction, repair,
improvement or maintenance of the road.
Her claim is based upon
the alleged negligence of the defendant and its employees – a
claim which is not excluded on the
ordinary wording of section
60(1)(b).
23.
With this issue out of the way, I proceed to discuss the evidence
furnished on behalf of the parties.
Both parties put into
evidence photographs of the location where the plaintiff testified
the accident had taken place, and some
distance prior to and beyond
that location. Unfortunately, the photographs all depict the
area either months before the accident,
in April 2010, or as it was
some years after the accident occurred, and they were therefore not
particularly helpful. No
contemporaneous photograph of the
accident scene or the roadway as it looked at the relevant time
exists.
The
evidence on behalf of the plaintiff
24.
Three witnesses testified in support of the plaintiff’s case.
Destiny Tashmeen
Henson (the plaintiff)
25.
The plaintiff testified that, at the time of the accident, she was 20
years old and had obtained her
driver’s licence two years
before, in 2008. On the day in question she had travelled with
her motor vehicle, a four-door
Ford Escourt, from Piketberg in the
morning to Saldanha to fetch her then-boyfriend, Mr Otto, who is now
her husband. The
sky was clear and the roadway was dry.
She remembered encountering potholes on the R311 in the direction of
Saldanha.
After meeting Mr Otto in Saldanha, they first visited
with his family in the area and then travelled to Porterville along
the R311.
The plaintiff is not able to recall the exact time,
but it was dusk when they commenced their journey back along the
R311.
They were not in a hurry, and she did not drive
fast. The road was not busy.
26.
Whilst she travelled along the R311, having left Hopefield and going
in the direction of Moorreesburg,
she again noticed numerous
potholes, which she tried to avoid. The potholes were not
“agtereenvolgend” (loosely
translated as “consecutive”)
and thus predictable, but occurred at scattered intervals. She
saw no warning signs
of potholes, but applied her own logic by
keeping a lookout and attempting to avoid the potholes to the extent
that they were visible
to her. There were no lights at the side
of the road. Her vehicle suddenly dipped sharply into a pothole
which she
saw, but which she was unable to avoid. She felt a
great impact, causing her to lose control of her vehicle. The
vehicle rolled and came to a halt against the fence of the Patrysvlei
Farm. She was able to get out of the vehicle, and waited
for a
long time before the police arrived at the scene.
27.
During cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that it was due to
the extent of the pothole into
which she drove - she said that the
vehicle had
"dipped'
into it - which caused her to lose
control and the vehicle to roll. She said that she was
travelling at approximately 50 to
60 km/hr and was not speeding. She
maintained, in cross-examination, that her eyes were on the road at
all times and that she could
see many potholes on the road surface.
28.
When it was put to her that warning signs regards the potholes could
have been there, she readily conceded
that there could have been
warning sign or signs. She had, however, not seen these - a
point I shall revert to later.
29.
Much time was dedicated to cross-examining the plaintiff on the
content of the police report compiled
in relation to the accident.
She maintained that she only provided the details of her personal
particulars, whether she had consumed
alcohol (she had not), and
whether she held a valid driver's license at the time. She is unaware
of where the police obtained the
further details noted on the report,
for example, the condition and quality of the road surface, whether
it contained potholes;
whether the roadsigns were clearly visible,
and what the condition of the roadsigns was. The defendant
emphasised that the
police report does not show that the plaintiff
had been able to identify the pothole in question.
30.
In
Rautini v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
[2021]
ZASCA 158
(8 November 2021), the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
the content of a discovered document (such as the police report in
the
present matter) remains hearsay, inadmissible and irrelevant to
the extent that it is denied by witnesses, unless the person who
recorded the information is called as a witness to such report:
“
[8]
This appeal raises
the important
issue regarding the admissibility of the contents of discovered
documents, without the author having to testify about
the correctness
of the contents thereof.
Counsel
for the appellant argued that the medical records could not be relied
on as they constituted hearsay evidence. The full
court however
attached considerable weight to them on the basis that the appellant,
who in fact discovered them, never disputed
their veracity. It then
concluded that the appellant in fact supported the respondent’s
version of events.
[9] Section
3(1) of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988 (the
Law of
Evidence Amendment Act) reads
as
follows: …
[10]
The
record indicates that the appellant’s counsel in his
opening address at the trial expressly stated that the discovered
documents
are what they purport to be, but that the correctness of
the contents was not admitted
. …This was confirmed by the
respondent’s counsel in this Court. In his heads of argument,
the respondent’s counsel
confirmed that the documents were
expressly admitted as evidence, although the content would remain
hearsay evidence in the sense
that the authors would not have to be
called. Furthermore, to call the authors as witnesses was
‘unnecessary in view of the
agreement between the parties and
would have been a waste of the court’s time’.
[11]
The
contents of the hospital records and medical notes constituted
hearsay evidence, and it is trite that hearsay evidence is prima
facie inadmissible. The discovery thereof by the appellant in
terms of the rules of court does not make them admissible as
evidence
against the appellant, unless the documents could be admitted under
one or other of the common law exceptions to the hearsay
rule
.
[12] It
is common cause that
the
respondent’s counsel made no application for any of the hearsay
evidence to be admitted
in terms of
s
3
of
the
Law
of Evidence Amendment Act. In
the
circumstances, the full court’s finding that material
differences existed between the appellant’s version and the
medical records regarding where he fell from the train, the cause of
his fall and his first lucid recollection after the fall,
was
erroneous. The full court’s reliance on hearsay evidence in
that regard amounts to a material misdirection that vitiates
its
ultimate finding on the outcome of the appeal that was before it.”
[Emphasis
added.]
31.
The defendant’s attempt to impugn the plaintiff’s
credibility using the police report in
the present matter is without
merit, as the content of the report remains hearsay evidence.
In the present case, as in
Rautini
, the parties accepted that
the discovered documents are what they purport to be. The correctness
of the contents thereof was not
admitted. The plaintiff’s
counsel in fact emphasised this in his opening address. The
police officer who had
compiled the report was not called to testify,
and the defendant never brought an application in terms of section 3
of the Law
of Evidence Act for the content of the police report to be
admitted as evidence.
32.
The plaintiff was referred to certain photographs discovered by the
defendant. It was put to her
that, according to the defendant's
records, no potholes existed on the road at the time. Departmental
worksheets containing
details of maintenance undertaken on the road
prior to and after the accident were put to the plaintiff, on which
she could, for
obvious reasons, not comment. The plaintiff was
steadfast in her evidence that there were numerous potholes in the
road.
She negotiated all of them save for the one that caused
the accident close to the entrance to the Patrysvlei Farm.
33.
On questioning by the Court, the plaintiff maintained that, once she
had struck the pothole and applied
her brakes, she lost control and
her vehicle rolled. She described the injuries she sustained in the
accident, in detail, which
had left her with a virtually useless arm.
Although she could not recall exactly where along the R311 the
pothole was situated,
she did not deviate from her evidence that
there had been a pothole on the road surface which caused her vehicle
to
"dip"
, resulting in her losing control and ending
up against the fence of the Patrysvlei Farm.
34.
No factual bases were put to the plaintiff during cross-examination
as to any manner in which she could
have been negligent in causing
the accident. All that was stated to her in this respect was
what the defendant had pleaded,
and what was going to be argued on
the defendant’s behalf. The plaintiff was adamant that
she had not been negligent
in any way.
35.
All things considered, the plaintiff’s evidence was not
undermined in any material way as a result
of her cross-examination.
Mr
Otto
36.
Mr Otto was the passenger in the vehicle. He was awake for the
duration of the journey.
He corroborated the plaintiff’s
evidence that there were potholes on the roadway from the time that
they started driving
along the R311 from Hopefield in the direction
of Moorreesburg. He stated that, at the point where the vehicle
had "dipped"
into the pothole, the plaintiff lost control
and the vehicle came to rest on the side of the road next to the
Patrysvlei Farm.
It was put to him in cross-examination that
the plaintiff, having been om the road for approximately “twenty
hours”,
could have been tired at the time and that this
resulted in her losing control of the vehicle. Mr Otto denied
this, saying
that they had stopped at a petrol station along the road
to rest. This question had in any event not previously been put
to the plaintiff herself.
37.
Mr Otto testified that it was dusk at the time of the accident.
He was confused as a result of
the impact and only regained his full
memory once in the ambulance. In cross-examination, he was
nevertheless adamant as to the
events he recalled prior to the
accident.
38.
Much emphasis was placed in cross-examination on when and who Mr
Bester (the owner of Patrysvlei Farm)
had called and where he had
obtained Mr Otto's personal details when Mr Bester requested repairs
to his fencing. The evidence
elicited did not take the relevant
issues any further.
39.
Mr Otto was cross-examined at length regarding the version provided
early on in his affidavit deposed
to after the accident, namely that
the accident had occurred at 19:20, which differed from what was
stated later in the affidavit,
namely that the accident had happened
at
"nighf'
. This alleged variance was explained by Mr
Otto reiterating that it was dusk at the time and that the correct
time was probably
19:20. I do not think that the slight
confusion as to the exact time of the accident is material in the
context of the evidence
as a whole. There was some issue as to
where the affidavit had been deposed to. This is immaterial, as
Mr Otto confirmed
that the affidavit was his and that he had deposed
thereto.
40.
What is of importance is that Mr Otto's evidence, insofar as he had
observed potholes along the R311
prior to the collision and that the
cause of the plaintiff’s vehicle leaving the road was her
hitting the pothole, was credible,
consistent and reliable.
Mr
Christoffel Johannes Bester
41.
Mr Bester is a farmer who owns farmland along both sides of the R311.
As a result of his family having
acquired the farm in 1974, and him
having travelled along the R311 approximately three times per day
since his early childhood,
he has first-hand knowledge of the
condition of the road both prior to 2010 and subsequent thereto.
After harvest time in
December, there is normally a lot of pressure
on that roadway as a result of trucks conveying produce in the
direction of Moorreesburg.
42.
Mr Bester testified that the R311 from Hopefield to Moorreesburg was
in a very bad condition.
He described the road, in Afrikaans,
as being "
in 'n haglike toestand'',
with many potholes.
He was adamant that the R311, prior to 2010, had many potholes along
the length of it, not only in front
of the entrance to his farm. He
had complained to the municipality, who indicated that it was not
their problem. The road
was repaired from time to time.
Mr Bester recalled that, after the work was completed, the rubble or
waste was generally
just left at the side of the road.
43.
With reference to certain photographs discovered by the parties, he
identified how the road had been
"patched" with cement and,
significantly, where he had himself patched potholes in the road at
the entrance to his farm,
Patrysvlei. His own patchwork was not
very clear but Mr Bester identified a whitish smear on the road as
his handiwork.
44.
Mr Bester's version corroborates the versions of the plaintiff and Mr
Otto, that the vehicle had slammed
into and flattened Patrysvlei
Farm’s fence at the side of the road. Although he was not able
to identify the cause of the
accident and the precise point of
impact, as he was not a witness to the accident, he stated that his
fence near the entrance to
his farm had been damaged (completely
flattened) as a result. Dissatisfied with the situation, he
traced the plaintiff and
Mr Otto from the details contained in the
police report. He confirmed having contacted Mr Otto to request that
he repair the damage
to the fencing. Mr Bester could not
pinpoint what had caused the_ accident, but was adamant throughout
his evidence that
there were_ "
verskeie"
potholes
on that stretch of the road. As he put it: "...
die
draad kon nie die ongeluk veroorsaak het
nie."
He stated further that one does not have to be an expert to recognise
a pothole. One can see that there is a hole in
the ground.
45.
In cross-examination, Mr Bester maintained that the road was in a
"
haglike toestand'
prior to and during 2010 and that it
was only around 2016 when construction was commenced to fix the
R311. The construction
took the defendant about two years to
complete.
46.
Further cross-examination revolved around the information Mr Bester
had provided to the plaintiff’s
assessor, but nothing
significantly adverse to the plaintiff's case was revealed in the
course of his evidence. Mr Bester
mentioned, as I have stated
earlier, that he had reported potholes at or near the alleged scene
of the accident to the local municipality.
He could not recall
having had sight of any warning signs.
47.
Mr Bester did not deviate in any material respect in his evidence,
although he was cross-examined in
depth regarding photographs
allegedly taken prior to 2010 and subsequent thereto. It was
put to him that, according to photographs
taken by the defendant's
maintenance team, work had been done from November 2010 until 22
December 2010 and that no record existed
of any potholes at the scene
of the accident. (It is worth mentioning at this juncture that this
version, put to both the plaintiff
and Mr Bester, was not confirmed
by defendant's own witness, Mr Schoeman.) Mr Bester maintained
that the defendant's photographs
could have been taken during 2016 or
shortly prior thereto, but not in 2010, with specific reference to
the construction in the
vicinity of the bridge.
48.
Mr Bester was an entirely independent witness. His demeanour
was forthright and honest.
His evidence can be accepted as
credible and reliable.
The
defendant’s evidence
49.
The defendant called one witness, namely Mr Stephanus Schoeman.
Mr
Stephanus Schoeman
50.
Mr Schoeman testified that he was the Chief Engineer: Construction
and Maintenance at the Department’s
sub-directorate
Construction and Maintenance based in Oudtshoorn. He performs
an oversight role on the R311, where the accident
occurred. He
was not the incumbent of the position at the relevant time.
51.
I have referred to the application initially made by the defendant
for a postponement to qualify Mr
Schoeman as an expert witness.
As mentioned, this was refused because it appeared from the facts
supporting the application
that Mr Schoeman could not give any
opinion relevant to the action. He could only give evidence as
to factual issues.
This was borne out by his evidence.
52.
Mr Schoeman had not personally seen the road in 2010. He
obtained information from his predecessors
regarding the incident and
had access to the so-called
"karretjie data"
(a
database compiled of date images taken on inspection of the roadway),
as well as worksheets relating to maintenance done on the
road by
external service providers. He could testify as to the factual
information apparent therefrom, but could not identify,
on the basis
of such information, what defects existed on the road. The
photographs tendered in evidence did not assist.
When the
plaintiff's photographs were put to Mr Schoeman for comment, he was
unable to deny Mr Bester's evidence regarding
the state of the road
at the time of the collision. He confirmed that the R311 was,
at the stage of the accident, nearing
the end of its economic life.
It was completely overhauled in and during 2016, or shortly prior
thereto.
53.
He explained that maintenance had been done on the R311 around the
time of the accident. This
appeared from the departmental
worksheets which confirm that, during the time, there were service
providers who commenced work
from May 2010 to May 2011 and from
October 2010 to February 2011. As mentioned, he was unable to
identify the exact nature
of the work done, or the exact location
thereof. In cross-examination, he was not able to state, for
example, if roadworks
were done from a point referred to as “0”
to “19,3km”, exactly where along that stretch of road the
patching
of the road surface had occurred. There were eleven
occasions from 1 November 2010 until 3 December 2010, approximately
five weeks
before the accident, that patchwork was done, but Mr
Schoeman was unable to state exactly where such patchwork was done.
54.
The worksheets show, for example, that if it is indicated that
patching was done from a point denoted
as “16km to 17km”,
one would accept that it was done for a 1km length of roadway.
Significantly, after the accident
on 1 February 2011 patching was
done for approximately 32.24m² in the vicinity of
Patrysvlei Farm, where the plaintiff
says the accident occurred. Mr
Schoeman was not able to testify what repairs had been done to
potholes in the year 2010 and prior
to the accident. The version put
to both plaintiff and Mr Otto in cross-examination that no records
had existed of potholes, was
thus not correct. The fact is that
the departmental records indicate repairs to have been done, but do
not detail the exact
nature of the repairs.
55.
Mr Schoeman could thus not dispute the plaintiff’s and the
other witnesses' account that the R311
was riddled with potholes at
the time of the accident and that Mr Bester had patched some of these
holes near the entrance to his
farm with cement.
56.
Mr Schoeman referred,
inter
alia,
in his
evidence in chief to a 100km speed limit sign, and a pothole
signpost from Hopefield to Moorreesburg, respectively
at approximate
0,43km and 0,73km where the R311 commences in the direction of
Moorreesburg. These appear from the photographs
shown to him.
It thus appeared from his evidence that the only signage prior
to the turnoff to Patrysvlei was at the beginning
of the R311.
One must, however, keep in mind that the photographs depicting the
signs had not been taken at the time of the
accident or shortly
thereafter, but in April 2010. It is therefore not known
whether the sign was still there at the time
of the accident. I
shall assume that it was.
57.
Mr Schoeman was unable to state how many accidents had been reported
on the R311. His evidence
was based purely on the worksheets
relating to repairs done from 1 November 2010 up to 28 March 2011.
58.
This, then, was the gist of the evidence led on behalf of each of the
parties.
Is
the defendant liable in delict?
The
existence of a legal duty towards the plaintiff, and the issue of
wrongfulness
59.
The issue of wrongfulness has been thoroughly discussed in the South
African case law over the years.
60.
In
Minister of
Police v Ewels
1975 (3) SA 590
(A) at 597A-B the then Appellate Division stated the following: "...
conduct is wrongful if public policy considerations demand that in
the particular circumstances the plaintiff has to be compensated
for
the loss suffered by the defendant's negligent act or omission, i.e.
the legal convictions of society regard the conduct as
wrongful."
61.
In
Gouda Boerdery BK v Transnet Ltd
[2004] 4 All SA 500
(SCA)
the Supreme Court of Appeal held, at para [12], that in order to find
whether a legal duty existed to act positively, factors
such
reasonableness, policy and, where appropriate, constitutional norms
should be considered. This position was confirmed
In
Hawekwa
Youth Camp and another v Byrne
2010 (6) SA 83
(SCA) at para [22]:
"
.... negligent conduct which manifests itself in the form of
a positive act causing physical harm to the property or person of
another
is prima facie wrongful.
By contrast, negligent
conduct in the form of an omission is not regarded as prima facie
wrongful. Its wrongfulness depends
on the existence of a legal
duty. The imposition of this legal duty is a matter for judicial
determination, involving criteria
of public and legal policy
consistent with constitutional
norms.
In
the result, a negligent omission causing loss will
only be regarded as wrongful and therefore actionable if public or
legal policy
considerations require that such omission, if negligent,
should attract legal liability for
the resulting
damages.
" [Emphasis added.]
62.
In Le Roux and others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and
Restorative Justice Centre as amici curiae)
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC),
the Constitutional Court held as follows at para [122]:
"In
the more
recent
past
our
courts
have
come
to
recognise,
however, that in the context of the
law of delict: (a) the criterion of wrongfulness ultimately depends
on a judicial determination
of whether - assuming all the other
elements of delictual liability to be present - it would be
reasonable to impose liability
on a defendant for the damages flowing
from specific conduct; and (b) that the judicial determination of
that reasonableness would
in turn depend on considerations of public
and legal policy in accordance with
constitutional norms.
Incidentally,
to avoid confusion it should
be
borne in mind that, what is meant by
reasonableness
in the context of wrongfulness has nothing to do with the
reasonableness of the defendant's conduct, but it
concerns the
reasonableness of imposing liability of the defendant for the harm
resulting from that conduct.
”
[Emphasis added.]
63.
In
Loureiro and others v lmvula Quality Protection (Pty) Ltd
2014 (3) SA 394
(CC) at para [53] the Constitutional Court warned
that the concepts of wrongfulness and negligence should not be
conflated:
"The
wrongfulness enquiry focuses on the
conduct and goes to whether the policy and legal convictions of the
community, constitutionally
understood, regard it as acceptable. It
is based on the duty
not
to
cause
harm
-
indeed
to respect
rights
-
and
questions the reasonableness of imposing liability
.
… [the defendant’s] subjective state of mind is not the
focus of the wrongfulness enquiry. Negligence, on the
other
hand, focuses on the state of mind of the defendant and tests his or
her
conduct against that of a reasonable person in the
same situation in order to determine fault."
[Emphasis
added.]
64.
In
ZA v Smith
2015 (4) SA 574
(SCA) Mr Za had slipped on a
snow-covered mountain slope in the Matroosberg private reserve, and
fell to his death over a 150-metre
precipice. Pertaining to
wrongfulness the Court referred to
Le Roux
,
Loureiro
and
Country Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure
Development, Gauteng
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC), and provided its reasons
for the finding of wrongfulness in para [21]:
“
In determining
wrongfulness, the other elements of delictual liability are usually
assumed. Hence the enquiry is whether —
on the
assumption (a) that the respondents in this case could have
prevented the deceased from slipping and falling to
his death;
and (b) that he had died because of their negligent failure
to do so — it would be reasonable to impose
delictual liability
upon them for the loss that his dependants had suffered through
their negligence. While denying, of course,
that these assumptions
could validly be made, counsel for the respondents conceded that, if
they were true, the answer to the question
posed must be 'yes'. I
believe that this concession was rightly and fairly made.
Apart
from the fact that both respondents were in control of a property,
which held a risk of danger for visitors, the second
respondent,
with the knowledge and consent of the first respondent, as owner of
the property, allowed members of the public, for
a fee, to make use
of a four-wheel-drive route, designed to lead directly to the area
which proved to be extremely dangerous
.”
[Emphasis
added.]
65.
In
MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd v
Swart
NO
2017 (5) SA 76
(SCA), a more recent judgment on the delictual
requirements of wrongfulness and negligence, the Supreme Court of
Appeal referred
at paras [16] to [18] to the
dicta
of the
Constitutional Court in
Loureiro
and
Country Cloud
, and
warned that
"(i)t is potentially confusing to take
foreseeability into account as a factor common to the inquiry in
regard to the presence
of both wrongfulness and negligence."
The
Court concluded in para [18] that it should now be recognised
"that
foreseeability of harm should not be taken into account in respect
·of the determination of wrongfulness, and
that its role may
be safely confined to the rubrics of negligence and causation."
66.
The
defendant denies that it owed a “duty of care” to the
plaintiff, but admits that, in terms of section 7(1) of the
Ordinance, the construction and maintenance of the R311 are his
obligations.
It
is so that public law obligation does not automatically give rise to
a legal duty for the purpose of the law of delict: see
Rail
Commuters Action Group v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005
(2) SA 359
(CC)
at paras [78], read with para [81].
67.
In the
present case, however, a proper interpretation of section 60 of the
Ordinance (and section 59 of the Act) puts the issue
beyond doubt.
It limits liability to very specific circumstances, not one of which
is applicable in the present matter.
I have dealt with the
pertinent limitation earlier in this judgment.
68.
In any event, the defendant effectively admitted in his plea that he
had a duty to maintain the·road
pursuant to the provisions of
the Ordinance. In the premises, a legal duty has been
established (see, for example,
Cape Metropolitan Council v Graham
2001 (1) SA 1197
(SCA) at para [6], where the Court held that an
admission that a defendant was under a legal duty to take steps so as
to minimise
injury to road users was, in effect, an acknowledgment of
wrongfulness;
Oppelt v Head: Health, Department of Health
Provincial Administration: Western Cape
2016 (1) SA 325
(CC) at
paras [51]-[54]; and
CS and another v Swanepoel and others
[2022] ZAWCHC 37
at para
[67]
).
69.
There are many cases dealing with the duties of a defendant in the
context of delictual actions arising
from the condition of roads.
These include
MacIntosh v Premier KwaZulu Natal
2008 (4) All
SA 72
(SCA),
Loots v MEC for Transport Roads and Public Works
[2018] ZANCHC 60
(5 September 2018),
Marcus v MEC, Department
of Public Works and Roads
[2017] ZANWHC 8
(1o February 2017), and
Van der Merwe v MEC, Public Works, Roads and Transport and another
[2019] ZAFSHC 6
(28 February 2019).
70.
In the
circumstances, this Court must first decide whether the plaintiff has
established if there was an omission in relation to
the harm that
forms the basis of her claim. Then, assuming that plaintiff
establishes such an omission, the Court must decide whether
the
omission on the part of the defendant was wrongful. Thereafter, this
Court must consider whether there was fault on the defendant’s
part in the particular circumstances of the case. The determination
of factual and legal causation in relation to the harm she
has
suffered follows. In respect of the question of legal causation, the
issue is – as set out in the case law referred to
earlier -
whether as a matter of public policy the defendant should be held
liable for the harm in the circumstances of the case.
Assuming that
both of those questions are answered in favour of the plaintiff, I
shall consider the question of contributory negligence.
71.
Returning
to the facts of the present case considered against the principles
referred to above, I agree with the submission by counsel
for the
plaintiff that, on the defendant's own pleadings, coupled with the
evidence of Mr Schoeman, there existed at the time of
the accident a
legal duty to maintain the R311. This duty included the duty to
ensure that it be free of risks such as potholes.
The
defendant’s witness did not dispute the fact that a pothole
could pose a serious risk to a road user such as the
plaintiff.
Given
the circumstances, the existence of a duty such as the plaintiff
alleges accords with what I would perceive to be the legal
convictions of the community (see
Cape Town
Municipality v
Bakkerud
2000
(3) SA 1049
(SCA)
at
1056F-G). It would not be unreasonable to burden the defendant
with such a duty (see
Gouda
Boerderye supra
at para [12]).
Negligence
and causation
72.
In respect of the issue of negligence, the oft-quoted
dictum
in
Kruger v Coetzee
1966 (2) SA 428
(A) at 430E-G bears
repeating:
"For the purposes of
liability culpa arises if-
(a)
a diligens paterfamilias in the position of the
defendant-
·
(i)
would foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct
injuring another in his person or property and causing him
patrimonial loss;
and
(ii)
would take reasonable steps to guard against
such occurrence; and
·
(b)
the defendant failed to take such
steps.
This
has been constantly stated by this Court for some 50 years.
Requirement (a)(ii) is sometimes overlooked. Whether a diligens
paterfamilias in the position of the person concerned would take any
guarding steps at all and, if so, what steps would be reasonable,
must always depend upon the particular circumstances of each case. No
hard and fast basis can be laid down. Hence the futility,
in general,
of seeking guidance from the facts and results of other cases."
73.
In
Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden
2002 (6)
SA 431
(SCA) the Supreme Court of Appeal held in para [23], with
reference to the test for negligence set out in
Kruger v Coetzee
,
that the enquiry as to what can reasonably be expected in the
circumstances of a particular case "...
offers considerable
scope for ensuring that undue demands are not placed upon public
authorities and functionaries for the extent
of their resources and
the manner in which they have ordered
their priorities
will necessarily be taken into account in determining whether
they
acted
reasonably”.
74.
The Supreme Court of Appeal A considered the issue of negligence as
follows in
MTO
Forestry supra
:
"[45]
…a landowner is under a 'duty' to control or extinguish a fire
burning on its land. But … whilst landowners
may be settled
with the primary responsibility of ensuring that fires on their land
do not
escape
the
boundaries,
this falls short of being
an
absolute
duty. And in considering what steps were reasonable, it
must
be remembered that a reasonable person is not a timorous faint-heart
always in trepidation
of harm occurring
but 'ventures out into the world, engages in affairs
and takes reasonable chances
'.
Thus
in considering what steps a reasonable person would
have taken and the standard of care expected, the bar,
whilst high, must not be
set so high as
to be out of reasonable reach
[46]
........
[47]
A reasonable landowner in the respondent's position was therefore not
obliged to ensure that in all circumstances a fire on
its
property would not spread beyond its
boundaries.
All
the respondent was obliged to do was to take steps that were
reasonable in the circumstances to guard against such an event
occurring. If it took such steps and a fire spread nevertheless, it
cannot be held liable for negligence just because further steps
could
have been
taken
."
[Emphasis added.]
75.
Turning to the principles applicable to causation: in
Minister of
Police v Skosana
1977 (1) SA 31
(A) at 34 E-G the then Appellate
Division set out the requirements for the determination of causation.
The first requirement is
a factual one relating to the question
whether the negligent act or omission in question caused or
materially contributed to the
harm giving rise to the claim. The
so-called "but for" test applies. If factual causation is
not proven, it is the end
of the matter. The second requirement is a
sufficient link between the negligent act or omission and the harm
suffered, or put
otherwise, legal causation.
76.
A flexible approach is followed in this regard, as set out in
Standard Chartered Bank of Canada v Nedperm Bank Ltd
[1994] ZASCA 146
;
1994 (4)
SA 747
(A) at 7641-765A in which "
factors such as reasonable
foreseeability, directness, the absence or presence of a novus actus
interveniens, legal policy, reasonability,
fairness and justice all
play their
part.
" See also
Fourway
Haulage SA (Pty) Ltd v SANRAL
[2008] ZASCA 134
;
2009 (2) SA 150
(SCA) at para
[34]
,
where the Court cautioned that the factors normally applied to
consider legal causati_on "
should not
be
applied dogmatically, but in a flexible manner so as to avoid a
result which is so unfair or unjust that it is regarded as
untenable.
"
77.
In
Van Duivenboden supra
it was held at para [25] that a
plaintiff is not required to establish the causal link with
certainty, but merely that the wrongful
conduct was probably a cause
of the damage. This calls for "... a
sensible retrospective
analysis of what would probably have occurred, based upon
the evidence and what can be expected to occur in the ordinary course
of human affairs rather than an exercise in metaphysics.
"
[Emphasis added.] A finding as to whether causation
is established on a balance of probabilities depends on the facts of
each
case (
Lee v Minister of Correctional Services
2013 (2) SA
144
(CC) at para [73]).
78.
Lastly in relation to the relevant legal principles, the matter of
Mashongwa v Passenger Rail Association of South Africa
2016
(3) SA 528
(CC) is an oft quoted authority in respect of factual
and legal causation:
"[41]
The
standard of a
reasonable organ
of state
is
sourced from
the Constitution. The Constitution is replete with the phrase
that the State must take reasonable measures to advance the
realisation
of rights in the Bill of Rights. In the context of
socio-economic rights the
availability of resources
plays a major part in an enquiry whether reasonable steps have been
taken. I can think of no reason in
principle or logic why that
standard is inappropriate for present purposes.
Here, as in
the case of socio-economic rights, the choice of steps taken depends
mainly on the available resources. That is why
an
organ
of
state
must
present
information to the
court to enable it to assess the reasonableness
of the
steps taken
.
…
[68]
No
legal
system
permits
liability
without
bounds.
It
is universally accepted that a way must be found to impose
limitations on the wrongdoer's liability. The imputation of liability
to the wrongdoer depends on
whether the
harmful
conduct is too
remotely connected to the harm caused or
closely connected to it.
When proximity has been
established
,
then
liability
ought
to
be
imputed
to
the
wrongdoer provided
policy considerations based on the norms and
values
of our Constitution and justice also point to the reasonableness of
imputing imputing liability to the defendant.
"
[Emphasis added.]
79.
I return to the fact of the present matter.
80.
The defendant argues that it appears that two mutually exclusive
versions arise in respect of the element
of causation, and that the
probabilities, based on the evidence presented, favour the
defendant. I do not agree. When
the evidence is
considered holistically and objectively, it is clear where the
balance of probabilities lies.
81.
The evidence of the plaintiff and of both her witnesses was credible
and reliable. It was never
suggested to any of them that their
evidence was a fabrication. Although it was generally put to
both the plaintiff and Mr
Bester that no records existed of a pothole
at the location of the accident (a submission that Mr Schoeman could
not confirm),
it was never put in cross-examination that the
plaintiff had
not
struck a pothole which caused her to lose
control of her vehicle, and that caused the vehicle to roll. On
the defendant's
own version, the signage at the beginning of the road
on the R311, clearly states that there were potholes in the road –
this was confirmed by the plaintiff, Mr Otto and Mr Bester.
82.
Mr Bester was an impartial witness to these proceedings and his
credibility cannot be impugned. It was
– correctly - never put
to him or argued that he had a motive falsely to implicate the
defendant or was biased in favour
of the plaintiff. He had no
interest in the matter.
83.
Mr Bester's evidence must be accepted that the road was in a
"haglike"
condition in 2010 and even before then.
This was not challenged. Mr Schoeman was also unable to dispute
this allegation. Although
Mr Bester conceded that the defendant had
on occasion patched the R311 in certain·places, the road
remained in a state of
disrepair until about 2016 when a major
overhaul took place.
84.
The defendant submits that Mr Bester’s evidence was
irrelevant. I do not agree. Although
Mr Bester did not witness
the accident itself, he observed the location of the damage to his
fence, and he was familiar with the
state of the road at the time,
especially in relation to the existence of potholes near the entrance
to his farm. His evidence
in this respect was not
“speculative”. He testified to facts with which he
was familiar. These aspects
were squarely relevant to the
issues to be determined.
85.
Mr Otto's evidence can also not be faulted, namely that he too had
seen potholes all along the road
and that the plaintiff had
"dipped'
into one, which caused the vehicle to roll and causing the
plaintiff to suffer the permanent injuries evident form the record.
86.
In the circumstances, I accept the evidence of the plaintiff and her
witnesses.
87.
The defendant’s case did little to disturb the evidence led on
the plaintiff’s behalf, and
to dispel the inferences that can
reasonably be drawn therefrom. The denial, put to the witnesses
in cross-examination and
submitted in argument, that there was any
pothole present at the scene of the accident is emphatically refuted
by the plaintiff’s
evidence. It does not appear from the
evidence led on the defendant’s behalf that the R311, on the
day of the accident,
was in a suitable condition for safe vehicular
use. The defendant’s case, and the submissions made on
his behalf, were
mainly based upon assumptions. The defendant
submitted, too, that the plaintiff had not proven that there was a
pothole because
she could not produce any “real” evidence
about its existence. The submission is based on the
dictum
in
Crafford v South African National Roads Agency Ltd
[2013] ZASCA 8
(14 March 2013) at para [21]:
“
[21]
Without knowing where the kudu came from, how it moved, the manner in
which it came to be in the road, and where it and the
appellant’s
motor vehicle were in relation to each other at any material time, it
is really impossible to determine solely
from the fact of a collision
where the kudu would have been and at what stage it would have become
visible to an approaching motorist,
irrespective of the length of the
grass alongside the road. In my view there are thus insufficient
objective facts from which it
can be inferred that if the grass
alongside the road had been kept short the appellant would have seen
the kudu earlier than he
did, let alone that on seeing it he would
have had sufficient time and space to have reacted and slowed his
vehicle sufficiently
to avoid a collision. The appellant therefore
failed to establish on a balance of probabilities that if the grass
had been kept
short the collision would not have occurred.”
88.
Crafford
does not assist the defendant, as it is
distinguishable from the present matter. The Supreme Court of
Appeal came to the
conclusion in para [21] because of the nature of
the beast (so to speak) in question:
“
[19]
The truth of the matter is that even had the grass alongside the road
been short at the time, one does not have sufficient
information to
determine how the collision probably took place. The list of
imponderables is infinite. We do not know whether the
kudu came from
the northern or southern side of the road, nor whether it was
trotting or running. Even accepting that the appellant
was driving at
about a 100 kph, one has no idea how, in what manner and at what
speed the kudu moved as the gap between it
and the motor vehicle
closed. It may have moved slowly into the road from a position in
which it was standing behind a large clump
of grass close to the road
but, equally possibly, it may have come at a run from the bushveld
beyond the road reserve, clearing
the fence and charging towards the
road into the roadway directly in front of the vehicle, giving the
appellant no chance to see
it. To find that any one of these
scenarios is in fact what probably occurred would be to indulge in
impermissible speculation.”
89.
The pothole in the present matter was fixed; it could not move around
in an unpredictable manner such
as a kudu can. The plaintiff
presented oral evidence as to the state of the road and the existence
of the pothole.
She also furnished evidence as to the probable
location of the pothole, indicated by the flattening of Mr Bester’s
fence.
The defendant was unable to refute this evidence.
90.
The case of
Snyman v Premier van die Noordwes Provinsie
(unreported judgment of the North West Division of the High Court,
Mafikeng on an application for leave to appeal, case number
614/2004)
upon which the defendant relies, also does not assist the defendant’s
case. In that case, the Court noted
at para [19] that “
it
was not the evidence of the Applicant that he indeed struck a
pothole. It was simply an assumption on the part of the Applicant
that he
may
have struck a pothole
.”
91.
The Court in that case stated further at para [21] that expert
evidence indicated that the damage to
the vehicle could not have been
caused by a pothole: “…
the
expert, Mr Kichenbrand who testified further that the collision,
especially having regard to the damage to the Applicant’s
motor
vehicle, could not and was not caused by the Applicant’s
vehicle having struck a pothole. Instead, he opined, that
the damage
to the Applicant’s vehicle is commensurate with the wheel of
the Applicant’s vehicle having struck another
vehicle.”
92.
This is not the case in the present matter. The plaintiff
testified that she had seen the pothole,
but was unable to avoid it.
Given the state of the road, riddled with potholes, the probabilities
that the plaintiff in fact
hit a pothole which led to the accident
and its
sequelae
, favour the plaintiff.
93.
That maintenance was done on the road during 2010 is common cause.
Such maintenance, however,
appears to have been inadequate. The
defendant did not lead evidence that it was not in a position to
repair potholes along
the R311 during 2010 or prior thereto. On
the contrary, the evidence indicated (although not directly in
relation to the
time at which the accident took place), that the
defendant knew about the problems with the road, and that his
employees or agents
returned to the road on various occasions to try
to fix the damage.
94.
Whether potholes – undeniably present on the roadway - were
fixed remains unclear. The defendant’s
evidence did not
establish that routine patrols had been done on the road for the
purpose of detecting potholes or other serious
defects along the R311
by a foreman or technicians, save for the rather neutral evidence led
by Mr Schoeman. He could not pinpoint,
for example, when the entire
road had been patched for a distance of 90km, or exactly where the
"patching had been
done".
He
could not say whether any potholes had been repaired. The
defendant failed to call the service providers which the
defendant
had employed to establish whether they had or had not attended to
pothole repairs in 2010.
95.
In short, the evidence did not dispel the inference that the
defendant, as a reasonable roads authority,
could have done more than
it did specifically in relation to the pothole problem (see
Loureiro
supra
at para [53]).
96.
Mr Schoeman conceded that it would be foreseeable that a pothole
could cause serious injury to a motorist.
97.
No evidence was led to the effect that a lack of financial resources
hampered the
defendant in the execution of his maintenance duties.
The defendant’s submission that the plaintiff set the
maintenance
bar too high for the defendant realistically to achieve
is not borne out by the evidence. There is no dispute that some
maintenance
had been done. The extent of the maintenance,
however, remains unclear.
98.
The defendant did not produce evidence that it had erected “
multiple
”
signs along the road, as pleaded, to bring to road users’
attention the state of disrepair of the road. What
has been
established is that there were two signs, one stating "
potholes
",
and the maximum speed sign, some way before the Patrysvlei Farm, near
the beginning of the road in question. Considering
the evidence
of the plaintiff and Mr Bester, the signage was wholly inadequate.
The contention in the defendant's plea that
"various steps
had been taken to ensure inter alia the existence of potholes and/or
any other defects on the public road were
brought to its attention
..."
falls to be rejected.
99.
The defendant argues that it cannot be excluded that, on the evidence
led, that there
may have been more roadsigns warning about potholes.
Even if there were only one sign, then the plaintiff had been
warned.
This may be so, but the plaintiff did know about the
potholes. She encountered many of them, and was on the lookout
for them,
despite the fact that she had not seen the pothole
warning. The fact remains that the road was in such a bad state
that she
could not avoid the pothole that caused the accident.
Contributory
negligence
100.
Insofar as the defendant contended that there had been contributory
negligence on the part of the plaintiff,
there exists no factual
basis for this proposition. It was never put to the plaintiff
how or why, on the facts of the matter,
she had been negligent in
contributing to the accident.
101.
It was not put to the plaintiff to what extent she failed to keep a
proper lookout. It was not put
to her how she had failed to observe
any hazard on the road. It was not put to her that she had driven at
an excessive speed or
had become too tired to drive. Surprisingly, it
was put to Mr Otto that fatigue could have overcome the plaintiff and
that that
could possibly have caused the collision. This proposition
was not put to the plaintiff and remains speculative. It falls
to be rejected.
102.
There is
simply no evidence to show that the plaintiff drove too fast in the
circumstances or was in any other way negligent in
the manner in
which she drove as pleaded by the defendant.
103.
In the
circumstances, the defendant has not discharged the onus of proving
that the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to
the accident.
Conclusion
104.
In all of these circumstances, I find that the plaintiff has proven,
on a balance of probabilities:
104.1
That the defendant had a legal duty during 2010 to repair potholes
along the R311;
104.2
That the defendant was negligent; and
104.3
Factual and legal causation were present in that that her vehicle had
struck a pothole close to the
Patrysvlei Farm, which had led to the
serious injuries she had sustained in the accident.
Costs
105.
There is no reason to depart from the general rule that costs follow
the event.
Order
106.
In the circumstances, the following order is granted:
106.1
The defendant shall compensate the plaintiff for 100% of
her proven or agreed damages.
106.2
Mr Otto and Mr Bester are declared to have been necessary
witnesses.
106.3
The defendant is to pay the costs of the action, including
the costs of senior counsel, as well as the reasonable
travelling
costs of the
plaintiff and her two witnesses, such costs to be taxed and paid
within 30 days after taxation.
_______________________
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff
: M.
Salie SC, instructed by Gerrie Steyl Attorneys
For
the defendant
: C.
Tsegarie, instructed by the State Attorney
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