Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 229South Africa
Williams v Pick 'n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd and Another (8377/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 229 (1 September 2023)
Headnotes
liable to indemnify Pick ‘n Pay for any damages that might be awarded against it in favour of the plaintiff.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Williams v Pick 'n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd and Another (8377/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 229 (1 September 2023)
Williams v Pick 'n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd and Another (8377/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 229 (1 September 2023)
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sino date 1 September 2023
FLYNOTES:
PERSONAL INJURY – Slip and trip –
Chartaprops
defence
–
Plaintiff
slipping on substance on floor – Cleaning duties outsourced
to third party – Spillage not cleaned up
for appreciable
time – Had supermarket complied with its legal duty of care
towards its customers, its staff would
have detected the spillage,
alerted the cleaners to the potential hazard and seen to it that
they cleaned up the mess before
the plaintiff trod in it –
Supermarket 100% liable and third party liable to indemnify it for
any loss from the award
of damages.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: 8377/2019
In the matter between:
MARIA
WILLIAMS
Plaintiff
and
PICK
‘N PAY RETAILERS (PTY) LTD
Defendant
TRADESOON
1020 (PTY) LTD t/a BLUEDOT
Third Party
Bench: P.A.L. Gamble, J
Heard: 15, 16 May & 9
June 2023
Delivered: 1 September
2023
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via email and release to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on Friday 1 September 2023.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
During the late morning of Monday 13
November 2017, the plaintiff, Ms. Maria da Luz Williams, went
shopping at her local supermarket,
Pick ‘n Pay, at the N1 City
Mall in Goodwood. She was a regular customer at that store and was
well known to the staff, inter
alia, because her late husband, who
sometimes accompanied her to the store, was a famous rugby player.
2.
The plaintiff was in the company of her
sister and, having completed her shopping, went to the till to pay.
While standing there
the plaintiff suddenly remembered that she had
forgotten an item – an electric fly repellant, as she
testified. She set off
down aisle no 4 to collect the item and
returned back to the till up a different aisle – no 5
apparently. While walking back
to the till along aisle 5 the
plaintiff slipped. Her feet shot out ahead of her and she landed on
her left side. The plaintiff
was in some quite considerable
discomfort and unable to get back on her feet immediately.
3.
Pick
‘n Pay employed a customer services manager by name of Ms.
Deliwe Sitsholwane, who was on duty on the day in question.
As I
understand the position of the customer services manager as described
by the parties, she was not the overall manager of the
store or even
a person responsible for the ordering and/or presenting of goods and
produce, but rather a person with whom the public
might engage if
they had queries about products on offer or perhaps the return of
unwanted goods. Ms. Sitsholwane was thus expected
to attend to the
needs and queries of customers in the supermarket.
4.
The plaintiff explained that the customer
services manager usually wore a red uniform and was affectionately
known by shoppers as
“The Lady in Red.” The plaintiff
testified that while she was still on the floor, Ms. Sitsholwane was
the first person
to come to her assistance. She was eventually helped
into a wheelchair and later taken to the nearby N1 City Hospital for
medical
attention. The plaintiff said she suffered certain
orthopaedic injuries for which she has received treatment and in
respect whereof
she will require further treatment.
5.
The plaintiff testified that Ms.
Sitsholwane and some of the other employees were most concerned that
the incident would attract
adverse media publicity given her
quasi-celebrity status. They asked the plaintiff not to go to the
media and assured her that
Pick ‘n Pay would compensate her for
her medical expenses. However, Pick ‘n Pay did not make good on
those promises
of compensation and the plaintiff was required to
issue summons in May 2019 in which she claimed general damages for
pain and suffering
as well as medical expenses, both past and future.
THE PLEADINGS
6.
In its plea, Pick ‘n Pay, while
admitting that it had a general duty of care to customers visiting
its store to ensure that
it afforded them a safe environment within
in which to shop, denied any liability on its part. It expressly
pleaded that the plaintiff’s
fall was due to her sole
negligence in that she failed to keep a proper lookout, failed to
take reasonable steps to prevent her
fall and failed to avoid injury
to herself. In the alternative Pick ‘n Pay pleaded contributory
negligence on the part of
the plaintiff and asked the court to reduce
any proven damages by an equitable amount, due regard being had to
the degree of the
plaintiff’s alleged negligence.
7.
Pick ‘n Pay further pleaded that it
had outsourced the cleaning duties and functions at that store to a
company known as Tradesoon
1020 (Pty) Ltd which trades as “Bluedot”
who, it had been agreed, would be liable to anyone injured as a
consequence
of its failure to properly discharge its cleaning
function. Pick ‘n Pay went on to allege that –
“
7.5.
In the circumstances, the Defendant had taken all reasonable care and
steps to comply with its obligations
vis-a-vis
the Plaintiff, in that the Defendant
provided a regular cleaning service, that in the circumstances, took
all reasonable steps to
prevent any harm befalling the Plaintiff.”
Pick ‘n Pay then
issued a third party notice to Bluedot asking for a declaratory order
that it be held liable to indemnify
Pick ‘n Pay for any damages
that might be awarded against it in favour of the plaintiff.
8.
In its plea to the third party notice,
Bluedot pleaded that the plaintiff’s alleged injuries were not
attributable to any
negligence on the part of its employees,
contending that such injuries were attributable to the plaintiff’s
own negligence.
Bluedot went on to allege in the alternative that the
plaintiff’s injuries were attributable to the negligence of a
merchandiser
who had failed to ensure that the area in which he or
she was operating and packing merchandise was kept safe and did not
cause
any danger or hazard to persons in the store and that he or she
had caused spillage in the store and had failed to take reasonable
measures to ensure the safety of persons in the store and in
particular the plaintiff.
9.
When the trial commenced before this Court,
the plaintiff was represented by Adv. P. Eia, Pick ‘n Pay by
Adv. S. O’Brien
and Bluedot by Adv. R.C. Jansen van Vuuren. The
parties were in agreement that the Court was required to determine
only the issue
of liability, with the quantum to stand over. The
Court then heard the evidence of just three witnesses – the
plaintiff,
Ms. Sitsholwane and the Bluedot cleaner on duty at that
time, Ms. Nozuko Naka.
THE RELEVANT EVIDENCE
10.
The plaintiff described the calamity as set
out above and testified that, while she sat on the floor after her
fall, she noticed
that she had slipped on some spillage. She said
that the sole of one of her sandals was covered in an oily substance
which she
thought was a reddish-orange colour. She was unable to
describe just what the substance was, but it is common cause that the
accident
occurred close to a shelf where pasta and sauces were on
display. Ms. Sitsholwane offered assistance and helped the plaintiff
clean
the substance off her sandal: Pick ‘n Pay’s
employee thus had direct knowledge of the fact that the plaintiff had
slipped
on some spillage in the supermarket.
11.
Eventually
the plaintiff was put into a wheelchair and taken to the parking lot
outside the supermarket where she was helped into
her vehicle and
driven to the N1 City Hospital close by and treated for her injuries.
The plaintiff testified that the vehicle
was driven by her sister but
it later transpired that it was in fact Ms. Sitsholwane, who assisted
by driving the plaintiff’s
vehicle to the hospital and then
walked back the short distance to the shopping centre.
12.
Under cross-examination by Mr. O’Brien,
the plaintiff was referred to a contemporaneous note taken at an
earlier inspection
in loco
conducted by the parties on 2 February 2022 where the plaintiff had
explained and demonstrated to the parties’ legal
representatives
just what had happened to her. There it transpired
that she had said that while walking down aisle 5 “
at
a fast pace…and when opposite the mayonnaise bottles on the
shelves, her right foot slipped from underneath her in a
right-backward direction. This caused her to stumble forward and
fall
.”
13.
The plaintiff was also referred to a
so-called “Incident Report” – a document which had
been compiled by Pick
‘n Pay shortly after the event. Some of
the document was completed by the plaintiff in her own handwriting
and another part
thereof by Ms. Sitsholwane. The document placed
before Court omitted the second page of the original report and is
thus incomplete.
Be that as it may, the incident report (which
appears to have been a contemporaneous note) recorded that the
plaintiff had said
that she was walking down aisle no 5 with a packet
of macaroni in her hand and that she “
just
slipped
”. It further recorded
that Ms. Sitsholwane had noted that the substance “
looked
like jam spillage, had oil in it caused (sic) customer to slip
.”
14.
The discrepancies in these recordals are of
no great consequence and do not detract from the plaintiff’s
veracity in the witness
box: she was a good witness who answered
questions put to her frankly and truthfully. There is
accordingly no reason to reject
the plaintiff’s version.
15.
Ms. Sitsholwane was called to testify about
her interaction with the plaintiff after her fall and she went on to
describe (in fairly
general terms) the store layout and the cleaning
regime which was supposed to have been in place at the time. She
explained that
the floors in the store were usually cleaned last
thing at night after the store closed its doors to customers. The
next morning
the cleaning staff would be required to conduct a
walkabout to ensure that the store was in order and safe for the
entry of shoppers.
16.
Ms. Sitsholwane went on to explain that
Bluedot’s staff were required to be on duty throughout the day
and that they patrolled
up and down the aisles, cleaning as they went
along. If there was a specific complaint regarding a spillage, a
member of the cleaning
staff was supposed to be promptly summoned and
a plastic sign put up at the area of spillage, warning customers of
the presence
of a hazard.
17.
Ms. Sitsholwane confirmed that she had
attended to the plaintiff after her fall, had cleaned the sole of her
sandal and had noted
an unidentifiable substance on the floor, which
she described as oily rather than sticky. In her evidence, she
attempted to minimize
the extent of the spillage saying that it was
no bigger than a R2 coin but it really matters not what the extent
thereof was as
its mere presence on the supermarket floor presented a
risk to any unassuming shopper, who would be expected to spend her
morning
looking at the merchandise on the shelves and not peering
down at the floor ahead of her.
18.
Under cross-examination, Ms. Sitsholwane
explained that the cleaning regime required the staff of Bluedot to
move through the aisles
in numerical sequence from aisle 1 to 6. She
assumed that the spillage had been on the floor of aisle 5 for only a
short while
as she said that the cleaner had been seen in aisle 6
after the fall, which led Ms. Sitsholwane to conclude that she had
finished
her work in aisle 5 before the plaintiff’s accident.
This fact appears to have been recorded in the incident report.
19.
Ms. Sitsholwane also confirmed her recordal
in the incident report that an external merchandiser (who was not
employed by Pick ‘n
Pay), a certain Severiano Jehoma, had been
busy arranging his company’s wares on a shelf close by and had
witnessed the plaintiff’s
fall. He was, however, not called as
a witness by any party.
20.
Lastly the Court heard the evidence of Ms.
Naka, who no longer works for Bluedot. She testified that she had
finished cleaning aisle
5 that morning and was busy in aisle 6 when
she was called across to aisle 5. There she found some spillage which
she identified
as resembling mayonnaise. It had already been covered
over by the said merchandiser with a piece of cardboard so as to
avoid it
presenting a hazard to shoppers. Ms. Naka said she cleaned
up the spillage and put up a cautionary sign until the floor was dry.
She went back after a while and retrieved the sign, noting that the
floor was then dry.
21.
Thereafter, said Ms. Naka, she continued
with her duties until, about an hour later, she heard that a shopper
had fallen in the
aisle which she had allegedly cleaned earlier. She
told the Court that she knew nothing of the incident involving the
plaintiff,
did not see her lying on the floor or being helped about
in a wheelchair and only heard about the plaintiff’s fall later
when others in the store spoke thereof. That then the evidence. What
of the law?
THE APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES
22.
The
issue of liability on the part of shop-keepers and building owners in
these so-called “slip ‘n trip” cases
has enjoyed a
fair degree of consideration in our law in recent decades. Many
thought that
Chartaprops
[1]
was the last word on the topic until
Cenprop
[2]
when the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) recently sought to revisit it.
23.
In
Cenprop
the facts were that it was a rainy day and the plaintiff slipped on a
puddle of water in a public area inside a shopping mall
notwithstanding the presence of warning signs cautioning her of wet
floors. It was common cause that rainwater had most likely been
transported into the mall through the pedestrian traffic of other
shoppers and had been there some while. Further, it was a situation
where it was known that the tiles used in the mall area were slippery
underfoot when wet. Ultimately, the SCA found that Cenprop,
the
building owner, was liable for the shopper’s injuries.
24.
Cenprop
differs
materially from this matter on the facts, as the SCA noted at [28] –
“
(T)his…is
not
a case
of spillages that sprout unexpectedly at the mall.” (Emphasis
added)
In
the present matter we are indeed dealing with a sudden and unexpected
spillage and the case thus rather bears resemblance to
the situation
in
Probst
[3]
(where the plaintiff stepped into a pool of cooking oil in a
supermarket aisle) rather than the
Cenprop
scenario referred to above.
25.
On
the other hand, this case is on a similar legal footing to
Chartaprops
and
Cenprop
in that the outsourcing of the cleaning function and the cleaning
company’s concomitant duties and responsibilities were
pleaded
by the mall owner. It was suggested in those cases that the owner had
done enough to discharge its duty of care to ensure
the safety of
customers by engaging the services of a third party contractor to do
the cleaning.
26.
In
Chartaprops
the plaintiff sued the mall owner and the cleaning company jointly
and severally, while in
Cenprop
the plaintiff sued the owner of the building and its managing agent
but not the cleaning company. In this matter, on the other
hand, the
plaintiff sued only the store owner alleging that it was the sole
wrongdoer liable for her damages.
27.
As already pointed out, the cleaning
company has been joined as a third party and is thus before the
Court. It has presented evidence
purporting to explain the steps it
took on the day in question in purported discharge of its contractual
responsibilities to Pick
‘n Pay under a service level agreement
and the latter has asked the Court to declare that Bluedot is liable
to it for any
damages that may eventually be proven against Pick ‘n
Pay.
28.
In
Cenprop
the SCA proceeded to restate the approach in matters of this kind
with reference to the well-known and oft-quoted decision in
Kruger
[4]
.
“
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.”
29.
With
reference to a building owner’s responsibility towards the
welfare of shoppers utilizing its premises, the SCA in
Cenprop
[5]
referred with approval to the judgment in
Probst
.
In relation to the sufficiency of evidence which needs to be adduced
to establish negligence on the part of the shopkeeper in
such cases,
the learned judge said the following in
Probst
[6]
.
“
(I)n
such a case the plaintiff generally cannot know either how long the
slippery spillage had been on the floor before it caused
his fall, or
how long was reasonably necessary, in all of the relevant
circumstances (which must usually be known to the defendant),
to
discover the spillage and clear it up. When the plaintiff has
testified to the circumstances in which he fell, and the apparent
cause of the fall, and has shown that he was taking proper care for
his own safety, he has ordinarily done as much as it is possible
to
do to prove that the cause of the fall was negligence on the part of
the defendant who, as a matter of law, has the duty to
take
reasonable steps to keep his premises reasonably safe at all times
when members of the public may be using them… It
is therefore
justifiable in such a situation to invoke the method of reasoning
known as
res ipsa loquitur
and,
in the absence of an explanation from the defendant, to infer
prima
facie
that a negligent failure on the
part of the defendant to perform his duty must have been the cause of
the fall. As explained in
Arthur v
Bezuidenhout and
Mieny
[1962 (2) SA 566
(A)] this does not involve any shifting of the
burden of proof onto the defendant: however, it does involve
identifying the stage
of the trial at which the plaintiff has done
enough to establish, with the assistance of reasoning on the lines of
res ipsa loquitur,
a
prima facie
case of negligence on the part of the defendant, so that unless the
defendant meets the plaintiff’s case with evidence which
can
serve, at least, to invalidate the
prima
facie
inference of negligence on his
(the defendant’s) part, and so to neutralize the plaintiff’s
case, judgment must be
entered for the plaintiff against the
defendant. In this situation the defendant does not have to go so far
as to establish on
the balance of probabilities that the accident
occurred without negligence on his part: it is enough that the
defendant should
produce evidence which leads to the inference that
the accident which caused harm to the plaintiff was just as
consistent with
the absence of any negligent act or omission on the
part of the defendant as with negligence on his part. The plaintiff
will then
have failed to discharge his onus, and absolution from the
instance will have to be ordered.”
30.
In
Cenprop
the SCA looked at the inter-relationship between the building owner
and the cleaning company in the context of what it called “
The
Chartaprops defence
”. It found
that the building owner in that matter had used a type of tile in the
passages of its mall which were prone to
be slippery when wet and
that, knowing this to be the case, it should have been reasonably
foreseeable to the owner that harm might
be occasioned to a shopper
in rainy conditions such as those that prevailed on the day in
question.
31.
The SCA went on to conclude that the case
was thus distinguishable from
Chartaprops
and that the owner could not, in the circumstances, rely on the fact
that it had appointed an independent contractor to attend
to its
cleaning functions to avoid liability to the injured shopper.
[31]…Unlike the
situation of ad hoc spillages, rainy weather posed a special and
foreseeable situation which ought to have
been mitigated. In this
situation the role played by the security company would not really
assist, as the security guards would
simply notify the cleaners when
they noticed a spillage. There was already a wet signage at the door,
which signaled knowledge
of the wet conditions.
[32]…
The rainy conditions on that day made it
reasonably foreseeable that possible danger and harm would occur,
thus the appellants as
the diligens paterfamilias in this regard
should have foreseen the possible danger that would be caused by
trafficking in of rainwater
brought in by the shoppers and should
have then taken active reasonable steps to guard against this
possible danger…
[34] Thirdly, the issue
of the make of the tiles, which directly implicates the principal,
could not be put at the foot of the cleaning
company. While experts
differ as to the textural suitability of the tiles, their evidence
converge on the fact that when wet the
tiles were potentially
dangerous. The circumstances of this case seem to put it in the
category of cases where the owner and manager
would be personally at
fault. That is why the Chartaprops defence cannot come to the
appellants’ aid.”
In the present matter the
potential source of danger to the shopper is more akin to the
situation that existed in
Chartaprops
and the case is thus to
be distinguished from
Cenprop.
THE
CHARTAPROPS
DEFENCE RESTATED
32.
In
Cenprop
the SCA summarised the defence as follows.
“
[24]
In
Chartaprops
,
this Court dealt with questions (sic) of whether a principal may be
held liable for the negligence of an independent contractor.
The
respondent in that case sued the shopping mall owner,
Chartaprops
,
and a cleaning company, Advanced Cleaning. The majority judgment
remarked about varying legal positions that were adopted by courts
on
this issue. It set out principles to be followed when dealing with
the liability of a principal and an independent contractor.
It
observed that ‘the correct approach to the liability of a
principal for the negligence of an independent contractor is
to apply
the fundamental rule of our law that obliges a person to exercise
that degree of care that the circumstances demand.’
In this
regard, it referred to
Cape Town
Municipality v Paine
,
[1923 AD 207
at
217] where it was held: ‘
The
question whether, in any given situation, a reasonable man would have
foreseen the likelihood of harm and governed his conduct
accordingly,
is one to be decided in each case upon a consideration of all the
circumstances. Once it is clear that the danger
would have been
foreseen and guarded against by the diligens paterfamilias, the duty
to take care is established, and it only remains
to ascertain whether
it has been discharged
. .’
[25]
The Court distinguished between the category of cases where work is
committed to a contractor and if properly done no injurious
consequences could arise and those cases where work is to be done
from which mischievous consequences would arise, unless preventative
measures were taken. In the latter category it said [at para‘s
39 & 40], ‘
if liability is to
attach to the principal it would be in consequence of his/her
negligence in failing to take
preventative measures to prevent the risk of harm from materialising
that a reasonable person in those
circumstances would
have
taken, other than in accordance with a proposition framed in terms of
non-delegable duty
.’
[26] It endorsed the
general rule in
Langley Fox Building Partnership (Pty) v Da
Valence
[1991 (1) SA 1
(A) at 13B] that a principal is not
liable for the civil wrongs of an independent contractor except where
the principal was personally
at fault and restated the classic test
for culpa as set out in
Kruger
. In determining the answer to
the second enquiry into negligence set out in
Kruger,
it noted
the following factors emphasised in
Langley
, namely, ‘the
nature of the danger; the context in which the danger may arise; the
degree of expertise available to the employer
and their independent
contractor respectively; and the means available to the employer to
avert the danger’.
[27]
Having set out the principles, the majority in
Chartaprops
then found:
‘
This
plainly is not the type of case where it can be said that
Chartaprops
negligently selected an independent contractor or that it so
interfered with the work that damage results or that it authorised
or
ratified the wrongful act. The matter thus falls to be decided on the
basis that the damage complained of was caused solely
by the wrongful
act or omission of the independent contractor, Advanced Cleaning, or
its employees.
Chartaprops
did
not merely content itself with contracting Advanced Cleaning to
perform the cleaning services in the shopping mall. It did more.
Its
centre manager consulted with the cleaning supervisor each morning
and personally inspected the floors of the shopping mall
on a regular
basis to ensure that it had been properly cleaned. If any spillage or
litter was observed, he ensured its immediate
removal. That being so
it seems to me that
Chartaprops
did all that a reasonable person could do towards seeing that the
floors of the shopping mall were safe. Where, as here, the duty
is to
take care that the premises are safe I cannot see how it can be
discharged better than by the employment of a competent contractor.
That was done by
Chartaprops
in
this case, who had no means of knowing that the work of Advanced
Cleaning was defective.
Chartaprops
,
as a matter of fact, had taken the care which was incumbent on it to
make the premises reasonably safe. . . .
Chartaprops
was obliged to take no more than reasonable steps
to guard against foreseeable harm to the public. In this regard, it
is well to
recall the words of Scott JA in
Pretoria
City Council v De Jager
[1997 (2) SA 46
(A)]:
“
Whether
in any particular case the steps actually taken were to be regarded
as reasonable or not
depends upon
a consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the case
.
It follows that merely because the harm which was foreseeable did
eventuate does not mean that the steps taken were necessarily
unreasonable. Ultimately the enquiry involves a value judgment
.”
(My emphasis.)
”
HAS
PICK ‘N PAY ESTABLISHED THE
CHARTAPROPS
DEFENCE
?
33.
Given the alternative allegations made in
its plea, it is apparent that Pick ‘n Pay seeks to rely on the
ratio
of
the majority judgment of the SCA in
Chartaprops
.
The question that then arises for decision is whether, having taken
what it alleges are reasonable steps to engage the services
of an
independent cleaning contractor in the form of Bluedot, Pick ‘n
Pay can now avoid liability for the plaintiff’s
alleged
injuries?
34.
The first issue raised in the plea,
however, is that the plaintiff’s alleged injuries were
occasioned by her own negligence.
In this regard it is important to
note that it was never suggested to the plaintiff under
cross-examination that she was the author
of her own misfortune. That
was because it is common cause that there was an unidentified
slippery substance (or spillage) on the
floor and that this
occasioned her fall.
35.
Having regard to the approach set out above
in
Probst
,
I am satisfied that the plaintiff has established that she took
proper care for her own safety on the morning in question. The
fact
that she may have moved down aisle 5 at more than a leisurely dawdle
did not occasion her fall: she did not slip or trip because
of haste
or inattention but because she stepped in some spillage of unknown
origin. In the circumstances, I am unable to find that
the plaintiff
was negligent in relation to her fall and the consequent injuries she
sustained.
36.
That being so, there is then a shift in the
evidential burden to Pick ‘n Pay on the strength of
Probst
to rebut the inference arising from the application of the maxim
res
ipsa loquitur.
As is suggested in that
case, the question of how long the spillage had been
in
situ
is a material consideration in
this case in determining whether Pick ‘n Pay has rebutted the
prima facie inference of negligence.
37.
Other
than the generalised evidence of Ms. Sitsholwane regarding the
standard procedure that the Bluedot cleaners were expected
to adhere
to in that particular supermarket, there is a dearth of direct
evidence as to what regime had actually been followed
on the day in
question. In her evidence Ms. Sitsholwane referred to the presence of
a “supervisor” called Ronald at
the supermarket who, it
seems, was responsible for monitoring the performance by the cleaning
staff of their duties. I assume from
the context of the evidence that
the said Ronald was an employee of Pick ‘n Pay and not Bluedot.
Be that as it may, there
was no evidence from such a supervisor
referencing, for example, work sheets from the cleaners as to which
aisles had been cleaned
and by whom, or when.
38.
The facts recorded in the incident report
by the plaintiff note that she fell at “
plus/minus
11:30”
, while in the section of
the same form filled in by Ms. Sitsholwane it was said that “
the
area was last inspected/cleaned prior to the incident…[at]
11:20am”.
Further, in response to
the question “
How frequently is
the area inspected during operating hours?
”
Ms. Sitsholwane noted that “
Cleaners
are visible whole day”.
39.
In her evidence before the Court, Ms.
Sitsholwane was unable to give an accurate estimate as to how long
the spillage had been in
place as the following passage demonstrates.
“
MR
O’BRIEN
: Do you know how long
that spillage was on that floor before you came there?
MS
SITSHOLWANE:
It’s a difficult one
to say how long, because I know that on my report I did say a few
minutes. The reason so that I said……The
reason is that
it was a few minutes before, because we had cleaners that were
cleaning on the next aisle. That was aisle number
6 and I assumed
that it would then be a few minutes before the customer fell. Because
there cleaners that were busy cleaning the
next aisle.
COURT
:
Would their natural route in the store be from aisle 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6?
MS
SITSHOLWANE
: That is correct Your
Honour.
COURT
:
So in aisle 6 would it be logical to conclude that they had already
finished in aisle 5.
MS
SITSHOLWANE
: That is correct Your
Honour.
COURT
:
It wasn’t as if they were working backwards from aisle 6 to
aisle 1.
MS
SITSHOLWANE
: No Your Honour, that is
there (sic) daily routine. When they are doing spot checks, they
would go aisle by aisle.”
40.
In the incident form, provision is also
made for the recordal of how long the spillage had been in place
before the plaintiff trod
in it. In this regard Ms. Sitsholwane noted
-
“
Few
minutes before the customer walked through the isle (sic)”.
There is then a follow up
question which asks -
“
How
did you determine the above as the investigator?”
The answer here was -
“
I
viewed the footage.”
41.
This last remark elicited some questioning
by Mr. Eia under cross-examination. It then transpired that there was
CCTV footage available
to Pick ‘n Pay recording the movement of
customers and staff on that day. The suggestion in the incident
report form by Ms.
Sitsholwane that the CCTV footage might shed some
light as to how long the spillage had been on the floor proved to be
no more
than idle speculation on her part. It was common cause, in
this regard, that the plaintiff’s fall was not captured on the
footage due to a technical feature of the recording and it was
further common cause that the spillage was not visible either. The
answer on the incident form is thus wrong.
42.
Furthermore, and as I have said above, in
the section of the incident report which she filled in, Ms.
Sitsholwane referred to the
presence of the merchandiser, Mr. Jehoma,
at the very place where the plaintiff fell. And, in her evidence, Ms.
Sitsholwane effectively
confirmed the allegation made by Bluedot in
its plea to the third party notice that Mr. Jehoma was present when
the plaintiff fell
and that he would have been in a position to
confirm how long the spillage had been on the floor.
43.
The evidence established that Mr. Jehomah
was employed by a company called Smollan which was responsible for
the marketing within
the supermarket of various brands of
merchandise. It stands to reason that Pick ‘n Pay would thus
have had access to Mr.
Jehomah’s contact details via Smollan
and would have been expected to call him if his evidence sustained
the fact that the
spillage had only been there shortly before the
plaintiff fell, thus meeting the test in
Probst
.
44.
In the result, I conclude that Pick ‘n
Pay’s failure to adduce such evidence leads to the reasonable
inference that
the spillage had been on the floor for some time
before the plaintiff fell and that it had failed to ensure that the
spillage was
timeously removed by Bluedot.
45.
The speculation inherent in Ms.
Sitsholwane’s evidence – that the spillage had only been
deposited on the floor shortly
before the plaintiff fell - is not
supported by the testimony of Ms. Naka whose evidence, regrettably,
adds little to the piece.
In fact, one might ask whether she was even
referring to the same incident. Be that as it may, Ms. Naka stated
that she had gone
back to aisle 5 from aisle 6 to clean up the
spillage of a small quantity of mayonnaise (manifestly not a
reddish/orange coloured
substance) at the request of the merchandiser
busy in aisle 5 (presumably a reference to Mr. Jehomah) who had
already put a piece
of cardboard over the spot.
46.
But that must have been some time before
the plaintiff’s fall, because Ms. Naka testified that she had
time to go back and
check up that the floor where she had cleaned up
the mayonnaise was dry. She said further that it was only much later
- perhaps
as long as an hour - that she heard of the plaintiff’s
accident from other employees in the store.
47.
In summary then, I am not persuaded that
Pick ‘n Pay has adduced any evidence of reliable and probative
value to show that
it is probable that the spillage which caused the
plaintiff to fall had only been on the floor for a short while before
she fell,
that it had therefore taken all reasonable steps to ensure
that the floor was free of any danger and that it was safe for the
plaintiff
to proceed down aisle 5 on her way to the till.
48.
It is no answer, in the circumstances, for
Pick ‘n Pay to say that it had appointed an independent
contractor to clean its
floors and that it had thus taken all
reasonable steps to ensure the safety of its customers. The facts
show that Bluedot did not
clean up the spillage which caused the
plaintiff’s fall for an appreciable period of time and had Pick
‘n Pay complied
with its legal duty of care towards its
customers, its staff would have detected the spillage, alerted the
cleaners to the potential
hazard and seen to it that they cleaned up
the mess before the plaintiff trod in it.
CONCLUSION
49.
In my considered view, then, Pick ‘n
Pay has not adduced sufficient evidence to rebut the prima facie case
of negligence put
up by the plaintiff. In the circumstances, the
plaintiff’s fall was occasioned by the negligence of Pick ‘n
Pay’s
employees and she is thus entitled to be fully
compensated by Pick ‘n Pay for such damages as she may prove in
the future.
50.
Pursuant to, inter alia, clause 12 of its
“Cleaning Service Agreement” with Pick ‘n Pay,
Bluedot is liable to
indemnify the supermarket group for any loss
incurred by it as a consequence of an award for damages arising from
the negligence
of Bluedot’s employees in the execution of their
functions and duties under that agreement. I did not understand Mr.
Jansen
van Vuuren to contend that the indemnity should not apply in
the event that it was held that Pick ‘n Pay is liable to the
plaintiff for damages arising from her fall on that day.
51.
In the circumstances, Pick ‘n Pay is
entitled to a declaratory order confirming that Bluedot is obliged to
indemnify it in
accordance with their agreement.
ORDER OF COURT
A. It is ordered that the
defendant is liable to pay to the plaintiff 100% of such damages as
she may establish in due course arising
out of her fall at the N1
City branch of the defendant on 13 November 2017.
B. The defendant shall
pay the plaintiff’s costs of suit herein.
C. The third party is
liable to indemnify the defendant fully in accordance with the
relevant provisions of its “Cleaning
Service Agreement”
with the defendant dated 27 May and 5 August 2015.
D. The third party shall
bear its own costs of suit.
__________________
GAMBLE,
J
APPEARANCES
For the Plaintiff:
Mr. P Eia
Instructed
by A Batchelor & Associates.
Cape
Town.
For the Defendant: Mr S
O’Brien
Instructed
by Adams Attorneys
Cape
Town.
For the Third Party: Mr
RC Jansen van Vuuren
Instructed
by Van Breda & Herbst Inc.
Pretoria.
[1]
Chartaprops
16 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Silberman
2009 (1) SA 265 (SCA)
[2]
Cenprop
Real Estate (Pty) Ltd and another v Holtzhauzen
2023 (3) SA 54 (SCA)
[3]
Probst
v Pick ‘n Pay Retailers
[1998] 2 All SA 186 (W)
[4]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966 (2) SA 428
(A) at 430E-G
[5]
At [22]
[6]
At 197g – 198c
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