Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 249South Africa
L.M and Others v Road Accident Fund - Appeal (A30/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 249 (11 October 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## L.M and Others v Road Accident Fund - Appeal (A30/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 249 (11 October 2023)
L.M and Others v Road Accident Fund - Appeal (A30/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 249 (11 October 2023)
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sino date 11 October 2023
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
RAF – Loss of support –
Suicide
–
Factual
and legal causation – Husband seriously injured in motor
accident and suffering pain and reduced ability to
work –
Trial court dismissing claim – Unending excruciating pain,
stress-related issues and depression caused
by accident –
Ability to make a balanced decision was deleteriously affected –
Suicide did not amount to a
novus
actus interveniens
and
requirements for causation established – Appeal upheld.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A30/ 2023
Court
a quo
Case Number: 468/2018
In
the matter between:
L[…]
M[…]
First Appellant
L[…]
M[…] obo
C[…]
Second Appellant
L[…]
M[…] obo
J[…]
Third Appellant
And
THE ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Respondent
Heard: 21 July 2023
Delivered: 11 October
2023
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole judgment and order handed down by
the trial court,
in respect of a delictual claim in which the
appellants sought loss of support against the respondent arising from
the death by
suicide of the first appellant’s husband, Mr V[…]
M[…] (“the deceased”) on 6 December 2016. On 21
June 2014, the deceased was involved in a motorcycle accident in
which he collided with another vehicle driven by an insured driver
in
terms of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
. As a result of that
collision, the deceased sustained multiple orthopaedic injuries to
his body.
[2]
Pursuant thereto, the deceased lodged a motor vehicle claim against
the respondent
for compensation for the bodily injuries he sustained
in the accident and for his past loss of earnings. Before his claim
was finalised
against the respondent, the deceased committed suicide
on 6 December 2016. The deceased’s claim against the respondent
was
settled after his death on 16 November 2018.
[3]
On 17 January 2018, the first appellant instituted a tortious claim
for loss of support
arising from the same accident against the
respondent in her personal capacity and in her representative
capacity of her minor
children, namely, the second and the third
respondents contending that the deceased's suicide and death were
causally, factual,
and legally related to the injuries the deceased
suffered during the collision. The first appellant, the widow of the
deceased,
sought to hold the respondent liable for her claim for loss
of support and for that of her minor children. The respondent
defended
the matter and disputed that any causation existed or could
be proven by the first appellant. The matter then proceeded to trial
before the court
a quo
.
[4]
Thus, the only issue that the trial court had to determine was
whether the suicide
of the deceased was caused by or arose from the
motor vehicle accident. In a detailed judgment, the court
a quo
found that the appellants had failed to establish a causal
connection between the injuries sustained by the deceased in the
accident
and the suicide. The court
a quo
also found that on a
conspectus of all the facts placed before it, it could not accept
that the evidence presented at the trial
made it clear that the
accident was the direct or proximate cause of the deceased’s
suicide. The trial court dismissed the
appellants’ claim and
directed that each party pays its own costs. It is this order that
the appellants seek to assail in
this court.
[5]
The first appellant thereafter applied for leave to appeal against
the judgment of
the court
a quo
. The trial court dismissed her
application for leave to appeal on 22 August 2022 on the grounds that
there were no prospects of
success on appeal. Discontented by this
decision, the appellants petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal in
terms of section 17(2)(b)
of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013. On 29
November 2022, the Supreme Court of Appeal granted the appellants
leave to appeal to
the full court of this division.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[6]
To fully comprehend the pertinent issues that must be determined in
this appeal and
the view I take in this matter; it is necessary to
outline a brief background of the facts underpinning the reasons that
fortify
my conclusion. Several witnesses testified at the trial, and
various documentary evidence, including expert reports, were handed
by agreement as exhibits. To the extent necessary, I will summarise
the evidence led at the trial and not repeat the evidence verbatim.
[7]
The first appellant was the first witness to testify. She testified
that she met the
deceased in 1991 while she was 16 years old and
doing grade 11, and the deceased was 17 years old. After she finished
school, they
moved in together. They married in 1995. He was 23, and
she was 22 years old at the time. The witness testified that two
daughters
were born from the marriage. The eldest, C[…], was
born on 22 April 2004, and the youngest, J[…], was born on 18
August 2006. She described the deceased as her knight in shining
armour prior to the accident. The deceased helped his mom's late
husband, a plumber, and learned many skills from him. After the
father passed away, the deceased worked for a company called Odd
Jobs
which did various work like roof-sealing, tree-felling, tiling, etc.
There, the deceased learned a lot of new trades until
he decided to
go on his own and started his own business.
[8]
The witness testified that, workwise, the deceased was one of the
hardest workers
that she had ever known. Everyone who met him
couldn't believe what the deceased could do. In 1995, the deceased
qualified as a
plumber and obtained his Plumbing certificate from
Olifantsfontein Training Centre. All along, they were based in
Limpopo, and
in 2000, they relocated to Cape Town. Upon arrival in
Cape Town, she worked for Volvo Tygervalley. The deceased built up a
successful
plumbing business in the Northern Suburbs, working mainly
as a subcontractor to a company called Kwikot, a supplier of geysers.
From 2002 until 2012, Kwikot essentially outsourced all their
warranty work to outside plumbers. The deceased was the main
contractor
tasked to do the whole of the Northern Suburbs. The
plumbing business grew such that the deceased had to buy six vans and
employed
12 people, excluding the deceased and the witness. The
witness assisted the deceased with the bookkeeping of the growing
business.
At that stage, the deceased was doing 90 percent of his
work from Kwikot and 10 percent a bit of private work.
[9]
In 2012, Kwikok’s Head Office in Johannesburg decided to employ
its own plumbers
instead of outsourcing work to subcontractors. The
witness testified that they were devastated when they got the news
that Kwikot
would reduce the amount of jobs it outsourced. This
significantly affected the deceased's business in that 60 percent of
his income
from Kwikot fell away, which he had to start covering
again from doing other work. The deceased began restoring caravans in
addition
to his plumbing business to make up for the loss due to
Kwikot reducing the amount of work outsourced. The caravan business
did
very well, and they had to move to a place with a big yard to
have space to park all the caravans.
[10]
The witnesses testified that they belonged to Tygerberg Caravan Club.
Once a month, at the beginning
of the year, they would go camping at
different places. She testified that before the accident, the
deceased was a good husband
to her and an excellent father to their
children. The deceased was the kind of man she respected and felt
safe with, and she knew
that no matter what happened, he would always
have her back. He always looked after her and the children. He was a
very loving
father. He was the kind of dad who would crawl in the
house with his hands and feet, carrying the children on his back like
a horse.
[11]
The witness further described the deceased as a loving and hands-on
father who always made sure
that his daughters enjoyed their
childhood lives. He was a hardworking father, and according to her,
there was a time when he earned
much more than people with degrees
because he was so hardworking. He would always find another way to do
something and make an
income. The witness described the deceased as
very loving and caring. He carried her in his hands. Everyone always
said that they
were this perfect couple. From the date she met him,
she felt safe and knew she would be safe with him, and no matter what
they
went through in life, they would get through together. She
stated that the deceased was sociable and loved riding motorbikes
with
his friends on Saturdays. He loved braais and having people to
his house or go to them for braais.
[12]
The first appellant testified that in June 2014, the deceased was
involved in a motor vehicle
accident while riding his friend's
motorbike alongside the beach road in Bloubergstrand. As a result of
that accident, the deceased
sustained severe bodily injuries. The
accident profoundly affected him psychologically, particularly in his
profession as a plumber
and handyman. It messed up his knee. The
witness testified that the deceased also had other injuries, but the
knee was the worst.
The deceased feared losing his leg. He also
feared how he would manage to do his work as a handyman/plumber
without a leg. He was
distraught about his business. The treating
doctor told them he would save the leg but that it was going to be
tricky, that it
was going to be an arduous healing process, and that
he might suffer pain after that. After his discharge from the
hospital, the
healing process at home took many months before the
deceased could eventually walk with crutches. Thereafter, when he
could walk
again without crutches, it was with difficulty.
[13]
The witness testified that the injuries left the deceased
significantly physically impaired.
He walked with a limp, and he
could no longer walk for long distances and could no longer sit on a
hard surface for long period.
He was hampered in that he could no
longer pick up and carry heavy weights, which was one of the reasons
he could no longer install
geysers. He also struggled to control his
bowel movement. He suffered from ongoing pain after the accident. He
had pain medication
prescribed for him by the doctor, which he used
but said was ineffective. After a day's work, he would complain that
he was tired
and in pain. He would have supper and sleep, knowing he
would also suffer from pain at night.
[14]
She testified that it was tough for him. His mood changed. He was
frustrated at times. He lost
some of his joy in life. He missed doing
the things that he used to be able to do, whether it was work-wise or
social activities.
At home, he was not playing with his children as
he used to. He couldn't go on a bike ride with them. He had a
mountain bike that
he could not use anymore as he could not cycle. He
couldn't pick up his children as he used to, and it was very
difficult for her
and the children. The deceased complained to the
witness that if he was already experiencing so much pain at such a
young age,
what would happen if he is older.
[15]
The deceased was no longer the man she married and not the dad he
used to be. He became frustrated
and sad. He kept asking why this
must have happened that day. His mood was low. This had a problematic
effect on their relationship
both emotionally and physically. The
deceased told her that he did not feel like a man anymore because he
couldn't do what he needed
to do as a man. His injuries weaned down
his business a bit.
[16]
However, there was a time when he said he felt very positive and knew
everything would work out
for the good. Notwithstanding the pain, the
deceased still tried to give his best. He still tried to restore the
caravan, but it
was not easy. The most challenging part was buying a
caravan, as he had to climb a ladder and look for leaks. Later, he
started
weaning off the caravan business and started doing wellpoint
installations. He did wellpoint installations up to his death. On the
date of his death, he was busy with a big project of wellpoint
installation in an estate.
[17]
She testified that after the accident, the deceased never stopped
earning money. Their income
was reduced, but there was always an
income. However, he was no longer the same as before the accident. As
hard as he tried, he
couldn't do everything he needed. As a
result, they had to reduce their standard of living. They relocated
from Durbanville
and moved to a more affordable house in Brackenfell.
They moved their children to a cheaper school. They also cancelled
their DSTV
subscription or anything that could lessen their expenses.
She had to find a job to make ends meet. The deceased was remorseful
that the witness had to look for a job.
[18]
She testified that after the accident, there were times when she
could see that the deceased’s
mood was low, which she never
experienced before the accident. The deceased was not the type of
person that would tell you I don't
feel well. He tried to push
through always. He did not want to believe that he was depressed or
that depression existed. He did
not believe in psychologists.
Instead, he would say I had a hard day. After the accident, there
were times when she was concerned
about his mental health and that he
was not feeling good.
[19]
She testified that a weekend before the Tuesday on which the deceased
committed suicide, she
discussed with the deceased his mental health,
which she was concerned about. Her late brother who passed away in
January 2022
due to Covid-19 complications, and the deceased's mother
also spoke to the deceased about his mental health. They were all
concerned
about his mental health and asked him to seek professional
help. On the day that the deceased committed suicide, she dropped the
children at school and went to see a Christian counsellor in their
neighbourhood about the deceased's mental health.
[20]
Later that fateful day, while she was still at the counsellor's
house, she spoke to her late
brother, who had a very close
relationship with the deceased. Her late brother was also very
concerned about the deceased's mental
health. The late brother told
the witness that he was apprehensive about the deceased and would
like to go to the house to speak
to him. Indeed, her brother went to
the deceased's house, and upon arrival, he, unfortunately, discovered
that the deceased had
committed suicide.
[21]
The deceased' mother, Ms S[…] B[…], also came to
testify. She testified that she
had a special relationship with the
deceased. The deceased was the eldest of her three sons. She was
always in contact with the
deceased. They went to the same church and
spent much time together as a family over the weekend. The deceased
went to a technical
school as he wanted to work with his hands. The
deceased went to learn different skills and not plumbing only.
Everything he did
with his hands went well. Ms B[...] testified that
the deceased was a go-getter and would do anything for his wife and
children.
She described him as a really, really good father.
[22]
Before the accident, he was an outgoing person. He enjoyed camping
and was a social person. He
did things for his children that his dad
never did to him and his brothers. He did not mind spending money on
his family, particularly
his children. After the accident, Ms B[...]
testified that the deceased's moods had changed. He became withdrawn
in himself and
by himself at home. He always looked like he was
absent-minded. He was physically impaired and could no longer perform
certain
mundane physical activities. He did not play with his
daughters as before because he was always in pain.
[23]
She testified that the deceased was worried because he could not give
everything he could do
to his daughters and wife that he provided in
the past. He was always in pain and also stopped socialising. The
deceased told her
he does not believe in people getting depression.
If something is bothering him, he works it out and finds a solution.
She did
not expect the deceased to commit suicide because she never
thought he would reach a place where he just couldn't handle it. She
was concerned about his wellbeing because he was in pain every day
from the day of the accident. The Monday preceding the day the
deceased committed suicide, she spoke to him on the phone, and the
deceased said to her I
effin
(expletive) can't handle this
anymore.
[24]
Dr Steyn, the orthopaedic surgeon who examined the deceased, also
testified. He examined the
deceased on 30 November 2015, almost a
year and a half after the accident and about a year before the
deceased committed suicide.
Dr Steyn confirmed his report and the
injuries the deceased sustained in the accident. According to him,
the deceased suffered
a concussion, fracture of the pelvis left
interior pubic ramus, as well as fracture of the ala of the sacrum.
The deceased also
suffered fracture of the right tibial plateau,
which meant that it was broken into several small pieces. He
testified that the
deceased also suffered a ligamentous injury to the
right thumb. His evidence was that getting a good result was very
difficult,
not impossible, in those cases. After the accident, the
deceased walked with a limp due to right knee pain. He testified that
the
deceased could not crouch on his haunches due to severe pain that
he experienced in the right knee. He experienced pain in the lumbar
spine due to ligament injuries. Dr Steyn also stated in his report
that the deceased also complained of right shoulder pain, which
commenced subsequent to the injury and was caused by having to
manipulate a wheelchair and crutches for an extended period of time.
[25]
Dr Steyn also testified that the deceased complained of pain in his
right thumb, where he had
sustained a ligament injury. With the type
of fracture that the deceased suffered to his tibial plateau, it was
a given that it
would develop arthritis in the knee joint. At the
time of examination, the deceased was already showing signs of early
arthritis,
which indicated a poor long-term prognosis. He testified
that the deceased's pain was all concordant with the nature of the
injury
sustained and the clinical and radiological findings.
According to Dr Steyn, due to the injuries the deceased suffered in
the accident,
he would not be able to perform work of a physically
demanding nature because of the pain he experienced in his knee
joint. He
would have been suited for light work only. That would mean
that activities such as carrying heavy weights, crouching, especially
in confined spaces, and climbing ladders, would elicit pain in the
knee joint.
[26]
Ms Benita Crouse, an occupational therapist, also testified. Her
testimony was that she assessed
the deceased on 23 February 2016. She
confirmed her report and testified that the deceased told her he
worked as a handyman. He
took different jobs to stay afloat
financially. The witness testified that the deceased's ability to do
work was affected because
he struggled, especially with his knee, as
he struggled to work bending down to ground level to do the heavier
components of the
job. The deceased reported to her that he
experienced pain in his right shoulder, hip, right hand, and right
knee. She testified
that the deceased's complaints in her report
correlated with his injuries in the accident. She agreed with Dr
Steyn that the deceased
was only suited to do light work after the
accident due to his injuries.
[27]
Esther Lydia Auret-Besselaar, an industrial psychologist in human
resources, also came to testify.
She assessed the deceased on 21 June
2016. During her assessment of the deceased, the latter was
frustrated, agitated, and emotionally
distressed. The witness
testified that it was a challenging consultation because of the
deceased's distress. The deceased informed
her that he couldn't do
what he used to do. He couldn't earn what he used to, and the doctors
could not fix him, and he was in
pain every day. The deceased further
reported to her that he couldn't rely on his workers and felt
trapped.
[28]
At the end of the assessment, the deceased shouted that he was so
frustrated that he wanted to
rip the plates out of his leg - "ek
gaan self hierdie penne uit my been iut ruk". It was a
frightening display of emotions.
The deceased struck her as this big,
brawny tradesman who was just trying his best but not succeeding.
After the assessment, she
emailed the deceased's attorneys to inform
them that the deceased was irate and despondent and should see a
clinical psychologist.
[29]
In her contemporaneous notes during the consultation, she reported
that the deceased was distressed
and frustrated, struggling and in
pain, a very despondent man, very angry and distressed. She also
reported that the deceased was
anxious and angry, struggling to
survive, and felt like a failure. She described the deceased as angry
and despondent - kwaad and
moedeloss. In her opinion, the suicide
resulted from the injuries the deceased suffered in the accident and
their sequelae. She
also interviewed the first appellant after the
incident, who thought the accident had caused the suicide.
[30]
She admitted during cross-examination that she did not explain to the
deceased to seek psychological
help besides Mignon Coetzee. According
to her, the deceased was too distressed as he wanted his business
back. She conceded, in
cross-examination, that the deceased did not
present having mental health problems. However, in re-examination,
she testified that
everything presented to her looked like the
deceased was in severe psychological distress. He was upset, angry,
and frustrated.
He was despondent and felt hopeless and helpless.
[31]
The Clinical Psychologist who interviewed the deceased, Ms Mignon
Coetzee, also came to testify. She interviewed
the deceased on 16
November 2016, three weeks before the deceased committed suicide. She
interviewed the deceased for approximately
three hours and the first
appellant for another half an hour to forty-five minutes. After the
deceased passed away and before she
could complete her report, she
had a telephonic interview again with the first appellant. The
witness testified that the deceased
did not have a solid academic
aptitude but was much more practical. The deceased took great pride
in providing stability for his
wife and children, contrary to what
his biological father did to him.
[32]
In her opinion, the deceased's self-esteem was routed in his
practical skills and entrepreneurial spirit.
The deceased was deeply
invested in and proud of his care and financial success. She
testified that the deceased did not display
weakness or
vulnerability. He mostly kept his feelings bottled up. The deceased
had no prior history of mental illness or suicidal
ideation. During
the consultation, the deceased dwelled on frustration, humiliation,
and dependence on people for basic things
like physical care and
hygiene. He felt like a failure because he could no longer provide
for his family or provide them with a
secure lifestyle and financial
independence.
[33]
The witness testified that the deceased steered clear of any talk of
psychological vulnerability or mental
dysfunction, and his language
of distress was frustration with physical pain. She described the
deceased as a stereotypical man
of action, not of expressed emotion.
The only emotion the deceased willingly admitted to her was
irritability and aggression, providing
her with an example of how
abusive he was towards his workers and the general labourers he
sometimes used. Ms Coetzee testified
that on questioning, the
deceased provided insight into more psychologically orientated
complaints, including anxiety, defence
driving, and road rage.
[34]
She noted in her report that at the time of assessment, the deceased
suffered from depression. However,
she did not formally diagnose him
because the deceased did not meet all the diagnostic criteria.
However, she described the personality
dynamics and the tremendous
distress the deceased was experiencing as a tremendous difficulty
adjusting to his altered physical
state. The witness noted that the
drop in the deceased's physical functioning resulted in a decline in
work performance, which
reduced his capacity to provide for his
family. She further described the psychological sequelae of the
accident as significant
distress associated with his physical
injuries.
[35]
She testified that the significant distress suffered by the deceased
manifested as frustration, anger, aggression,
reduced self-esteem,
crisis of identity, feelings of hopelessness, and depression. The
deceased's psychological distress stemmed
from his physical injuries.
Then it filtered into his personal life, his relationship with
others, and his relationship with himself.
It filtered through his
work life with hopelessness, anger, and aggression. The extent was
that it spanned all facets of his life.
[36]
She asked the deceased whether he had received any psychological or
psychiatric intervention
since the accident, and he had not. The
deceased was dismissive of mental illness, and at the time of
assessment, he denied suicidal
ideation. The witness testified that
the deceased started with a more hopeful attitude immediately after
the accident. However,
over time his body began to show wear and
tear. The deceased started to be confronted with long-term
irreversible, permanent damage.
He became more despairing,
frustrated, and hopeless, hence his decision on that Tuesday morning
to commit suicide.
[37]
During cross-examination, she was quizzed whether, in her view, the
deceased suffered from impaired
judgment. In response, she testified
that the deceased was significantly distressed and he was in pain.
She stressed the fact that
the deceased was not mentally well. She
emphasised that the deceased may not have met the diagnosable mental
illness diagnostic
criteria. However, he was not mentally well.
Therefore, there must have been a degree of not thinking clearly
about everything.
Her clinical opinion was that the deceased was
mentally ill and had an impaired clarity of mind for him to have
taken such drastic
action. It was not in his makeup before the
accident to give up, abandon his family and devastate his children.
She testified that
she gave the deceased feedback at the end of the
assessment and recommended psychotherapy and possibly pharmacotherapy
intervention.
[38]
When it was further put to her during cross-examination that the
defence witness, Mr Loebenstein,
would testify that suffering from a
mental disorder was the most probable cause of suicide, she disagreed
and stated that 50 percent
of people who commit suicide do not have a
mental illness. In her opinion, physical illness, injury, and
dysfunction are other
primary causes of suicide. In her opinion, the
deceased's suicide was a direct consequence of the accident's impact
on his life.
That concluded the evidence for the plaintiff.
[39]
The defendant called Larry Loebenstein to testify. He is a qualified
clinical psychologist. At
the hearing of this appeal, the court was
advised that Mr Loebenstein has since passed away. Mr Loebenstein was
requested a report
summarising his findings regarding the deceased's
functioning in general, particularly after his motor vehicle accident
on 21 June
2014 up until the time of his suicide on 6 December 2016.
He never interviewed the deceased or any of the deceased's family
members.
He only had regard to the medico-legal reports filed in the
matter and the raw data of Ms Auret-Besselaar and Ms Coetzee.
[40]
He believed the deceased did not suffer from any recognised mental
disorder. According to him,
the deceased displayed many symptoms
consistent with the injuries that he sustained in the accident,
particularly his pain and
his significantly decreased physical
ability to continue in the position that he held, although he was
self-employed before the
accident. When he was asked about the
deceased not having sought help for his difficulties, the witness
conceded that the deceased
might have been, as Ms Coetzee concluded,
a do person rather than a thinking person who would have felt that he
should take on
the burden of whatever he was suffering from.
[41]
On the appropriateness of retrospective assessment, he testified that
this is difficult, and
the primary reason for that is that the person
assessed is not available due to death. In his opinion, forming an
opinion when
you cannot interview the individual makes for a
hazardous enterprise. He further stated that the second aspect is
that it is unethical
to comment and form an opinion about somebody
whom you have not examined. He disagreed with Ms Coetzee and averred
that based on
the evidence presented, it cannot be said that the
deceased died due to the motor vehicle accident. According to him,
there was
no sufficient data to make that suggestion.
[42]
However, he did not dispute the evidence of Ms Coetzee that, in her
opinion, the deceased suffered
from depression, although she did not
formally diagnose him as suffering from major depressive disorder
since the deceased did
not meet all the criteria for such a
diagnosis. When he was asked about Ms Coetzee's conclusion that the
suicide was a direct result
of the accident, Mr Loebenstein answered
that if the deceased had said, I can't take it anymore, I have heard
enough, I can't see
a future for myself because of what the accident
has done to me, or variations of that, one would draw that
conclusion, but otherwise,
not. In his view, there were no objective
facts to support that conclusion.
[43]
During cross-examination, he conceded that Ms Coetzee was in a much
better position than he to
form an opinion about the deceased's state
of mind. He testified during cross-examination that there were enough
averments by the
deceased to warrant an evaluation of major
depressive disorder. The fact that the deceased did not show enough
symptoms of depression
did not suggest that the deceased was
psychologically well. He also conceded during cross-examination that
the accident injuries
could have been the cause of the suicide. That
concluded the evidence led before the trial court.
THE
DISPUTED ISSUES
[44]
This court is enjoined to determine whether the court
a quo
was correct in finding that the appellants had failed to establish a
causal connection between the injuries sustained by the deceased
in
the accident and the suicide. Further, whether the court
a quo
was correct in finding that on a conspectus of all the facts placed
before it, it could not accept that the evidence presented
at the
trial made it clear that the accident was the direct or proximate
cause of the deceased's suicide.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
[45]
The first appellant bore the onus to prove her case. The first
appellant had to prove on a preponderance
of probabilities that the
deceased's suicide on 6 December 2016 was a direct or proximate
result of the accident which occurred
on 21 June 2014. In an
endeavour to prove her case, the first appellant testified and called
expert witnesses to support and corroborate
her case. The first
appellant implored the trial court to find on a balance of
probabilities that the deceased took her life due
to the injuries he
sustained in the motor vehicle accident that occurred on 21 June
2014. The trial court dismissed the first appellant’s
claim
based on factual causation and found that the evidence of the first
appellant and her witnesses was deficient to hold the
respondent
liable. Pursuant thereto, I turn to consider the complex problem of
causation.
Causation
[46]
It is trite that whether an act can be identifiable as a cause
depends on a conclusion drawn
from available facts and relevant
probabilities. In other words, it must be established whether the
injuries sustained by the deceased
in the collision were a
sine
qua non
of his eventual suicide, in the sense that had he not sustained such
injuries, he probably would not have committed suicide. The
complex
problem of causation involves a consideration of two different
questions:
First,
whether any factual relation exists between the defendant's conduct
and the harm sustained by the plaintiff. The diagnostic tool
is 'the
but for test', often referred to as the
conditio
sine qua non
theory, which involves a hypothetical enquiry as to what probably
would have happened but for the defendant's wrongful conduct.
[1]
The courts have recognised that a rigid application of the ‘but
for test’ may sometimes yield unpalatable and unfair
results,
and have thus cautioned against applying rigid deductive logic.
[2]
This common law test is thus applied flexibly, recognising that
common sense may have to prevail over strict logic.
[47]
Secondly
,
whether or to what extent the defendant should be held legally
responsible for the consequences factually induced by his or her
conduct. This is referred to as legal causation. The enquiry into
legal causation usually follows factual causation. It asks whether
a
sufficiently close relationship exists between the factual cause and
the consequent loss to give rise to legal liability.
[3]
Put differently, the question is whether the loss is too remote for
the factual cause to also be the legal cause. If not, no legal
liability may arise. In delictual matters, policy considerations are
applied to guard against attaching liability in an indeterminate
amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class.
[4]
[48]
That causation represents a dual problem on different levels of
inquiry was authoritatively enunciated
by the Appellate Division, as
it then was, in the leading case of
Minister
of Police v Skosana,
[5]
where the court stated that causation in the law of delict gives rise
to two rather distinct problems. The first is a factual one
and
relates to the question as to whether the negligent act or omission
in question caused or materially contributed to the harm
giving rise
to the claim.
[6]
If it did
not, then no legal liability can arise. If it did, then the second
problem becomes relevant, viz. whether the negligent
act or omission
is linked to the harm sufficiently closely or directly for legal
liability to ensue or whether, as it is said,
the harm is too
remote.
[7]
Was
factual and legal causation established in this matter?
[49]
The present case, in my view, turns on the first of these problems,
that is, causation in fact,
for it could hardly be contended that if
the collision and the subsequent injuries caused or contributed to
the death of the deceased,
this was too remote a consequence to give
rise to legal liability.
[50]
Before I can consider the issue of causation vis-à-vis this
matter, I must emphasise that
this appeal is based mainly on facts.
It is trite law that a court of appeal should be slow to interfere
with the findings of fact
of the trial court in the absence of
material misdirection.
[8]
An appeal court's powers to interfere on appeal with the findings of
fact of a trial court are limited.
[9]
Without demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial court,
its findings of fact are presumed to be correct. They will only
be
disregarded if the recorded evidence shows they are clearly wrong. It
is also settled that when an appeal is lodged against
the trial
court's findings of fact, the appeal court should take into account
the fact that the trial court was in a more favourable
position than
itself to form a judgment because it was able to observe the
witnesses during their questioning and was absorbed
in the atmosphere
of the trial.
[10]
[51]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
S
v Naidoo and Others,
[11]
reiterated
this principle as follows:
‘
In
the final analysis, a court of appeal does not overturn a trial
court’s findings of fact unless they are shown to be vitiated
by material misdirection or are shown by the record to be wrong.’
[52]
However, it must be stressed that when applying the
abovementioned principle which underlies
the well-defined approach of
a court of appeal to such factual findings, over-emphasis of the
advantages which the trial court
enjoyed is to be avoided, lest the
appellant's right of appeal becomes illusory.
[12]
[53]
In the present matter, it is common cause that the deceased suffered
severe bodily injuries due
to the collision, which significantly
impaired him physically. Although he was positive initially, he later
lost his joy in life.
The first appellant's uncontested evidence was
that the injuries sustained by the deceased in the accident had a
profound physical,
emotional, and psychological effect on him. The
deceased told the first appellant that he does not feel like a man
anymore because
he couldn't do what he needed to do. He felt less of
a man.
[54]
The injuries devastated the deceased so much so that he was at some
point scared that he would
lose his leg. He was also anxious about
how he would manage his type of business without a leg. The first
appellant also presented
uncontested evidence before the trial court
that the accident affected the deceased such that he could no longer
sit on a hard
surface for a long time, he could not walk for a long
distance, he struggled to use his right thumb when having to use a
power
tool or hammer, he had great difficulty bending down and
kneeling, he could no longer run, he could no longer sleep well, he
had
trouble negotiating stairs, he could no longer pick up or carry
heavy weights, he also realised that he would not be able to apply
for a position as a plumber as nobody would hire him with his
difficulties. He suffered ongoing pain after the accident.
Importantly,
he could not control his bowel movements.
[55]
According to the first appellant, the deceased took pain medication,
which was ineffective. The
ongoing pain the deceased suffered was
corroborated by Dr Steyn, who testified that the deceased was
experiencing pain, particularly
from his right knee and right
shoulder joint. Dr Steyn also noted that the deceased complained of
pain in his right thumb. He also
confirmed that the deceased's
various complaints referred to in evidence by the first appellant and
Ms B[...] were concordant with
the nature and injuries suffered by
the deceased.
[56]
It must be stressed that when Dr Steyn examined the deceased, it was
almost a year and a half
after the accident. Notwithstanding, the
deceased was still experiencing excruciating pain from his injuries.
This evidence corroborated
the evidence of the first appellant, her
expert witnesses, and the evidence of Ms B[...] on the pain the
deceased was experiencing
immediately before his death. Due to the
ongoing pain, the deceased became dejected, and his ability to
practice his profession
as a plumber and handyman was diminished. The
injuries and pains had a tremendous knock-on effect on his quality of
life, his feeling
of happiness, and his mental and emotional health.
The accident impaired him physically such that he was trapped in a
body aching
with pain daily.
[57]
This evidence was not challenged nor contradicted at all at the court
a quo.
During the cross-examination of the plaintiff and Ms
B[...], the emphasis was on the fact that the deceased did not seek
medical
treatment or consult a pain specialist. However, that the
injuries impaired him physically was unchallenged. Importantly, the
trial
court did not consider this evidence or the depth thereof in
its judgment. Instead, the court
a quo
concentrated on the
evidence of the expert witnesses (Ms Coetzee and Auret-Besselaar) and
their reliability. The court
a quo
did not consider the
evidence of Ms Crouse, the occupational therapist, the first
appellant and Ms B[...] on the physical and psychological
impact that
the injuries caused the deceased. In my opinion, the court
a quo
erred in failing to account for all the evidence adduced before it.
[58]
I must emphasise that two basic principles should be kept in mind
whenever evidence is evaluated
namely: evidence must be weighed in
its totality and not on a peace-meal basis, and that probabilities
must be distinguished from
conjecture or speculation. An appraisal of
all the evidence is required. Evidence that is reliable should be
weighed alongside
such evidence as may be found to be false.
Independently verifiable evidence, if any, should be weighed to see
if it supports any
of the evidence tendered.
[13]
[59]
Crucially, the trial court found that the appellant had the onus to
prove that the injuries sustained
by the deceased triggered a mental
condition which mental condition caused the deceased to act
irrationally and with uncontrollable
impulse, i.e., that it must be
proven that the suicide was a direct result of a diagnosable
psychiatric condition. Simply put,
the court
a quo
evaluated
the evidence against this backdrop of the need for proof of some form
of psychiatric injury that led the deceased to commit
suicide. It
based its reasoning throughout its judgment that a psychiatric
condition had to be proved. It found that because there
was no
psychiatric diagnosis in this matter, it is rather difficult to
elucidate the deceased's conduct on the morning he died
by suicide.
In my view, this is where the court
a quo
went wrong. This
error, in my view, affected the correctness of its judgment in its
entirety.
[60]
As correctly pointed out by Mr Roux, the first appellant did not need
to prove that the deceased
suffered from a psychiatric condition at
the time of the suicide. All that the appellants were required to
prove was a sufficient
causal link between the sequelae of the
injuries and the ultimate suicide of the deceased. In other words,
the court
a quo
had to look at the conspectus of all the
evidence and determine with reference to all the evidence that was
presented at the trial
whether the deceased had an impairment of
judgment when he committed suicide pursuant to his injuries.
[61]
In any event, Ms Coetzee, the Clinical Psychologist, described the
level of distress of the deceased
and stated that he was not mentally
well. She asserted that there was a degree of impairment of mind and
that the deceased's state
of mind was not within the norm. She
stressed the fact that the way the deceased spoke about frustrations
and distress suggested
something more significant. The fact that he
felt disheartened and hopeless and did not know which way to turn to
spoke to the
severity of his psychological symptoms. In addition, Ms
Coetzee asseverated that the deceased's thinking ability was
compromised
and that he was not thinking with clarity about
everything.
[62]
Meanwhile, the first appellant's uncontested evidence was that the
injuries sustained by the
deceased in the accident had a profound
psychological effect on him, so much so that she was very much
concerned about his mental
health and had urged him to seek help.
This was the weekend before the Tuesday on which the deceased
committed suicide. In fact,
on that fateful day, she went to a
Christian counsellor in her neighbourhood to seek assistance. The
first appellant's brother,
who was very close to the deceased, was
also concerned and worried about his mental health, so much so that
he wanted to speak
to him. Unfortunately, on the day that he went to
talk to the deceased, upon arrival at the deceased's house, he
discovered that
the latter had committed suicide, and he notified the
first appellant accordingly. In my view, this important piece of
evidence
was not given sufficient attention by the trial court.
[63]
Instead, the court
a quo
found that there was no tangible
evidence to explain why the deceased committed suicide. In my view,
the court
a quo
erred in this regard. The cumulative effect of
the evidence the first appellant and her witnesses presented points
to the vulnerability
of the deceased. The evidence presented at the
trial reveals that the deceased was a man who kept his card close to
his chest.
He would not easily open up. He was not a robust sort of
personality. He was a manly man. He took great pride in providing for
his family. Despite his physical challenges, he kept to himself.
Those around him saw that he was struggling miserably and were
very
concerned.
[64]
It was argued on behalf of the respondent before the trial court and
in this appeal that the
deceased did not seek professional help and
that this is indicative of a person who could not commit suicide.
This argument, in
my view, is mistaken and misses the point. People
are different and respond differently to situations and
circumstances. The fact
that the deceased did not go for medical help
is inconsequential. When Mr Loebenstein, the respondent's witness,
was asked about
the deceased not having sought help for his
difficulties, he stated that the deceased might have been, as Ms
Coetzee concluded,
a do person rather than a thinking person who
would have felt that he should take on the burden of whatever he was
suffering from.
[65]
What is vividly evident in the evidence is that the deceased was
suffering excruciating pains
arising from the motor vehicle accident.
The pain he suffered was also corroborated by Dr Steyn, the
orthopaedic surgeon who told
the court that the type of fracture the
deceased sustained to his tibial plateau was a given that it would
develop arthritis in
the knee joint. Importantly, at the time of
examination, the deceased was already showing signs of early
arthritis, which indicated
a poor long-term prognosis. More so,
according to Dr Steyn and Ms Crouse, the industrial psychologist, due
to the injuries the
deceased suffered in the accident, he would not
be able to perform work of a physically demanding nature because of
the pain he
experienced in his knee joint.
[66]
I have little doubt that the injuries and the pain that the deceased
was going through affected
him tremendously and compromised his
thinking ability. The uncontroverted evidence was that the deceased
was a man who loved his
family and wife. It was not his makeup to
give up or to abandon his family and devastate his children. The
deceased took great
pride in providing stability for his wife and
children, contrary to what his biological father did to him. The
evidence suggests
that he did not know which way to turn to. He
couldn't handle the situation anymore, and hence he committed
suicide. In my view,
there is overwhelming evidence that the injuries
sustained by the deceased led him to commit suicide. Surely, there
was a degree
of impaired judgment for him to have taken such drastic
action.
[67]
Furthermore, the respondent's witness Mr Loebenstein, a reputable
clinical psychologist with
many years of experience, conceded that
his colleague Ms Coetzee was better positioned to comment on the
deceased's state of mind
since she consulted with him for three
hours. He further acknowledged that the injuries arising from the
accident could have been
the cause of the suicide. Notably, Mr
Loebenstein conceded that if there were objective facts that showed
that the deceased was
despondent, such that the deceased having said
before the suicide that he could not take it anymore, then one could
conclude that
the suicide was due to the accident.
[68]
Indeed, the evidence did show that there were such objective facts in
the form of what the deceased
relayed to his mother a day before the
deceased committed suicide. The deceased's mother (Ms B[…])
testified about how the
injuries and their sequelae affected the
deceased. Ms B[...] testified before the court
a quo
that the
day before the deceased committed suicide, the deceased had said to
her over a telephone discussion, I
effin
(expletive) can't
handle this anymore.
[69]
Meanwhile, Ms Auret Besselaar, the industrial psychologist, testified
that when she consulted
with the deceased on 21 June 2016, the
deceased was emotionally distressed and despondent to such an extent
that she thought it
prudent to send an email to the deceased's
attorney to inform them that the deceased was very angry and
dejected. She also recommended
that he see a clinical psychologist.
While Ms Coetzee asserted in her evidence that three weeks before the
deceased committed suicide,
she observed that the deceased was
distressed and recommended psychotherapy, possibly pharmacotherapy
intervention. She also stated
that the deceased was depressed though
he did not meet the criteria for major depression. She also observed
that the judgment of
the deceased was impaired and compromised due to
his mental stress. Her evidence was consistent with the evidence of
the first
appellant, Ms Crouse, and Ms B[...].
[70]
The court
a quo
criticised the evidence of the expert evidence
of Ms Auret-Besselaar and Ms Coetzee on the basis that they were
unreliable because
their conclusions fell in the realm of personal
belief or opinion, guesswork, and speculation. The trial court found
no evidence
connecting the symptoms observed by both Ms
Auret-Besselaar and Ms Coetzee to suicide. The trial court noted
further that neither
Ms Coetzee nor Ms Auret-Besselaar testified that
after assessing the deceased, they discovered that the symptoms the
deceased exhibited
increased his chances of committing suicide.
[71]
I have some difficulty with this finding. It is important to note
that in the contemporaneous
notes she made when she consulted with
the deceased, Ms Auret-Besselaar pointed out that the deceased was
very "distressed,
frustrated; very despondent; traumatic, and in
pain; struggling every day, can't struggle like this; anxious and
angry; struggling
to survive, feels like a failure". This
witness further testified that after assessing the deceased, she
observed that he
needed psychological intervention because he
presented as extremely distressed and intensely angry. She
immediately wrote to the
deceased's attorney and recommended that the
deceased should seek psychological help. Her consultation with the
deceased was very
difficult because of the distress the deceased was
suffering. The fact that she immediately recommended psychological
intervention
corroborates her conclusion that the deceased was
distressed when she consulted with him.
[72]
While Ms Coetzee, on the other hand, noted in her contemporaneous
notes that the deceased was
“vengeful; frustrated; felt like a
failure; becomes despondent and angry”. She diagnosed the
deceased as suffering
from depression, although not major depression.
Ms Coetzee further noted that when she consulted with the deceased
three weeks
before the deceased committed suicide, the deceased was
mentally not well, and this manifested through agitation, irritation,
hopelessness,
despondency, despair, and frustration. She said the
deceased’s psychological sequelae was significant distress
associated
with physical injuries.
[73]
Mr Eia, who appeared for the respondent, argued that the two expert
witnesses were trying to
build a case for the deceased against the
respondent and that their evidence should be viewed from that prism.
I do not agree with
this proposition. In my view, the evidence of the
two expert witnesses (Ms Coetzee and Auret-Besselaar) must not be
pigeonholed,
compartmentalised, and looked at in isolation. Their
evidence should be assessed in one melting pot together with all the
other
evidence that was tendered, particularly the uncontested
evidence of the deceased's wife (the first appellant) and Ms B[...] –
the deceased's mother on the physical and psychological impact the
injuries had on the deceased.
[74]
I am of the opinion that the evidence of the two expert witnesses
viewed objectively, was of
appreciable help to the trial court. I
pause to emphasise that an expert opinion must accordingly be based
on relevant facts disclosed
by admissible evidence. A court must
ascertain whether the opinion expressed by the expert is logically
based upon those facts.
[14]
The evidence of the experts, in particular Ms Coetzee, in my opinion
was based on facts and logical reasoning. It was corroborated
in all
material respect by the evidence of the first appellant, Dr Steyn,
and Ms B[...] on the continued pain and incessant discomfort
the
deceased suffered prior to his death.
[75]
Notably, the anger and despondency that the deceased exhibited
immediately before his death caused
his wife - the first appellant,
his mother and the appellant's brother to be concerned about his
mental health and to recommend
him seek medical help. Given these
considerations, I am of the view that the opinion of Ms Coetzee, was
not based on guesswork
but had a logical basis and defensible
conclusion of her finding.
[15]
[76]
A full conspectus of all the evidence points to one direction only,
and that is, the deceased
was depressed due to the serious
orthopaedic injuries he sustained in the motor vehicle collision that
took place on 21 June 2014.
He was depressed, experienced unending
excruciating pain, and could not think clearly about everything. His
ability to make an
informed judgment was diminished and impaired, and
hence he committed suicide on 6 December 2016. There is a clear
causal connection
between the injuries and the sequelae suffered by
the deceased and the resultant suicide.
[77]
The present case, in my view, is on all fours with
Road
Accident Fund v Russell
,
[16]
("the
Russell matter"
).
The facts in the present matter are in many respect similar to the
facts in the
Russell
case. The court
a
quo
distinguished this case from the
Russell
matter
on the basis that in
Russell
,
the deceased had brain damage. In contrast, the deceased did not
suffer from brain injury in this case. The trial court also noted
that in
Russell,
it was conceded that the deceased was suffering from depression,
whereas in this case, there was no such concession. Mr Eia expressed
similar sentiments during the argument in this appeal. For the
reasons that follow, this argument is with respect erroneous and
mistaken. Thus, the court
a
quo
erred
in reaching that conclusion.
[78]
Unlike in
Russell
, the trial court was correct in finding that
there was no brain injury in the present matter. However, this is
neither here nor
there. It must be stressed that it does not matter
whether the impairment of judgment or whether the emotional effect
thereof arises
from a brain injury or from physical injuries. There
is no logical reason to draw such a conclusion. The Supreme Court of
Appeal
in
Russell
certainly did not limit the issue in similar
matters to brain injury. The critical question is whether, on the
totality of the
evidence, a finding can be made that there was an
impairment of judgment or an emotional issue that precipitated the
suicide due
to the injury sustained. I find the following reasoning
from the
Russell
judgment apposite for present purposes. The
court stated:
“
[16]
The trial court found that the suicide was not a
novus actus
interviniens
but was causally connected to the negligence of the
insured driver.
It appears from a proper appraisal of the evidence
that no factors extraneous to the injuries caused by the accident led
to the
suicide.
Such inducing factors as there might have been,
additional to the depression and loss of cognitive function, factors
such as an
inability to earn a living and being removed from his home
environment, were all direct consequences of his injuries (My
underlining).”
[79]
I must emphasise that in the
Russell
matter, although the
deceased was brain damaged, he was fairly able intellectually or
cognitively to understand and appreciate his
actions. He was not
mentally or cognitively invalid. Prior to the collision, the deceased
did not suffer from depression. However,
after the collision, the
deceased was found to suffer from depression and not severe
depression. In the same way, in this matter,
the deceased enjoyed a
productive life and did not suffer from depression before the
accident. After the accident, the deceased,
in
casu,
suffered
from depression but was not diagnosed with major depression. He was
also not mentally or cognitively invalid.
[80]
In the
Russell
matter, the expert witness gathered information
from the nursing sister who looked after the deceased and took a
backward glance
to recover relevant information about a person who
was already dead. The expert concluded that the deceased suffered
from depression.
In this case, Ms Coetzee examined the deceased. She
consulted with the deceased and the first appellant and concluded
that the
deceased was suffering from depression and not major
depression. Ms B[...] confirmed that the injuries mentally affected
the deceased,
but he was not cognitively invalid.
[81]
Importantly in the
Russell
matter, the court accepted the
evidence of a prominent neuropsychologist,
who did not examine the
deceased at all
but instead, conducted a psychological autopsy on
the deceased, which he described as taking a backward glance to
recover relevant
information about a person who is already dead in an
attempt to reconstruct the role which the deceased played in
eventuating his
demise. The expert witness concluded his assessment
and found that the deceased suffered from depression, but not severe
depression,
based on information made available to him, primarily
through
interviews with the wife of the deceased
and a
nursing
sister of the institution
where the deceased was housed.
[82]
In the
Russell
matter, the court found that the suicide was
not a
novus actus interveniens
but was causally connected to
the insured driver's negligence. The court found further that from a
proper appraisal of the evidence,
no factors extraneous to the
injuries caused by the accident led to the suicide. Similarly, in
casu,
an assessment of the whole evidence reveals that there
were no factors unrelated to the injuries suffered by the deceased in
the
accident which could have led to the deceased's suicide.
Furthermore, no evidence was adduced to support a finding that a
cause
unrelated to the accident prompted the deceased to commit
suicide. Therefore, I conclude that the deceased would not have
committed
suicide but for the accident.
[83]
Even though the deceased's act of suicide may be said to have been
deliberate, I am of the view
that the weight of the evidence
presented before the court
a quo
proves on the probabilities
that the deceased's ability to make an informed judgment was
compromised and impaired to a material
degree by the unending
excruciating pain, stress-related issues, and depression caused by
the motor vehicle accident that occurred
on 21 June 2014.
Consequently, his ability to make a balanced decision was
deleteriously affected. As the court found in
Russell,
though
the suicide was deliberate, it did not amount to a
novus actus
interveniens.
[84]
Consequently, in applying the flexible approach in determining the
legal causation, I am of the
opinion that it would be eminently
reasonable, fair, and just to hold that the evidence presented at the
trial established the
requirements for such causation. Consequently,
the appeal must succeed, and the respondent, in my view, is liable to
compensate
the first appellant for such damage as she may prove.
ORDER
[85]
In the result, I would propose that the following order be granted:
85.1
The appeal is upheld with costs including the costs of 2 counsel.
85.2
The plaintiff’s claim succeeds on the merits with costs of
counsel.
85.3
The defendant shall pay the plaintiffs such amount as they may prove
arising from their claim for loss of
support as a consequence of the
death of the deceased.
____________________________
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and it is so ordered:
______________________________
ERASMUS
N
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree:
______________________________
SAMELA
M
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
the appellant: Adv Roux SC
Instructed
by: DSC Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv Eia
Instructed
by: The State Attorney
[1]
Guardrisk
Insurance v Café Chameleon
2021
(2) SA 323
para 37.
[2]
Lee
v Minister for Correctional Services
2013
(2) SA 144
(CC) paras 44 and 47.
[3]
Napier
v Collect and Another
[1995] ZASCA 44
;
1995
(3) SA 140
(A) at 144D-F.
[4]
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development
2015
(1) SA 1
(CC) para 24;
Guardrisk
Insurance v Café Chameleon
2021 (2) SA 323
para 42.
[5]
1977 (1) SA 31
(A) at 34 – 35.
[6]
Silva's
Fishing Corporation (Pty.) Ltd. v Maweza
1957(2) SA 256 AD at 264;
Kakamas
Bestuusraad v Louw
1960
(2) SA 202
(AD) at 222).
[7]
See
International
Shipping Co (Pty) Ltd Bently
1990 (1) SA 680
(A) at 700.
[8]
R v
Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705-706.
[9]
S v
Francis
1991
(1) SACR 198
(A) at 204E.
[10]
S v
Monyane and Others
2008 (1) SACR 543
(SCA);
R
v Dhlumayo
1948 (2) SA 677
(AD)
.
[11]
2003 (1) SACR 347
(SCA) at para 26.
[12]
Protea
assurance Ltd v Casey
1970
(2) SA 643
(A) at 648E.
[13]
S v
Trainor
2003 (1) SACR 35
(SCA) para 9.
[14]
MV
Pasquale Della Gatta
2012
(1) SA 58
(SCA) at para 26.
[15]
Michael
v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd
2001 (3) SA 1188
(SCA) para 36 and 37.
[16]
2001 (2) SA 34
(SCA).
sino noindex
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