Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 116South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Mcdonnell In re: Mcdonnell v Road Accident Fund (13183/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 116 (9 June 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Road Accident Fund v Mcdonnell In re: Mcdonnell v Road Accident Fund (13183/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 116 (9 June 2022)
Road Accident Fund v Mcdonnell In re: Mcdonnell v Road Accident Fund (13183/2015) [2022] ZAWCHC 116 (9 June 2022)
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sino date 9 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 13183/2015
In
the matter between
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
APPLICANT
AND
MCDONNELL
JOHANNA ELIZABETH
RESPONDENT
In
re:
MCDONNELL
JOHANNA ELIZABETH
PLAINTIFF
AND
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
Date of hearing: 23
February 2022
Date of Judgment: 09 June
2022 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE
J
[1] This is an opposed
application wherein the applicant (RAF) sought an order rescinding
and setting aside an order made on 7 December
2020. The application
was based on the common law and the applicant sought that the common
law be developed in accordance with
the provisions of section 39(2)
and section 173 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996 (Act No. 108 of 1996)
(the Constitution). The applicant’s
case was that the inherent power of the court as envisaged in section
173 of the Constitution
extended to rescission proceedings in
appropriate circumstances, where serious injustice would otherwise
result, and that this
was such a case.
[2] The basis of the
opposition was that the real purpose of the application was an
attempt to revisit the merits of the respondent’s
claims. The
merits had been pronounced upon and no appeal had been lodged. The
respondent’s case was that the application
constituted a second
attempt to appeal the order granted, which was not only
impermissible, but was an abuse of process.
[3] The issue is whether
a judgment granted on 7 December 2020 where RAF elected not to
participate in judicial proceedings, stood
to be rescinded. The
condonation application is granted.
[4] The applicant used to
constitute a panel of attorneys to assist in litigation in the event
of claims not settled. In November
2019, the applicant did not extend
the tenure of its panel of attorneys as part of its strategy to
reduce costs. According to the
applicant, this was after an
observation that the costs associated with these panels were too high
and detracted from the main
focus and object of its core mandate,
which was to pay for reasonable compensation to victims of motor
vehicle accidents. The new
model was to ensure that there would be
more funds available to compensate the ever-growing number of
claimants who were victims
of motor vehicle accidents.
[5] The applicant alleged
that it had noted that the courts had begun exercising a greater duty
and judicial oversight to ensure
that awards were fair, reasonable
and justifiable on the facts. The applicant alleged that the
short-term consequence of the change
of strategy was that the
applicant was not represented at court in disputed matters which
proceeded to litigation. The applicant’s
employees were not
officers of the court and did not have the statutory mandate or other
authority to make representations in court.
The claims that the
employees handled were not limited to the province where the employee
was found in the administration of the
claims. According to the
applicant, it was practically impossible for the employees to attend
court proceedings.
[6] The respondent was
injured in a motor vehicle accident on 3 December 2011. The injuries
sustained were in dispute. The applicant’s
case was that the
respondent sustained a whiplash type injury, was not hospitalized and
spent a week at home recovering from the
injury and thereafter she
returned to work. According to the applicant the Health Professions
Council of South Africa determined
that the whiplash injury sustained
by the respondent was not ‘serious’ and therefore the
respondent did not qualify
for general damages. The applicant’s
case was that the respondent managed to go back and fulfil her
employment duties after
the accident. The case is further that she
even resigned from her job to start her own consultancy which
remunerated her better
than her pre-accident employment. According to
the applicant, the respondent was physically able to continue with
her pre-accident
work. It seems to be conceded however, that she
needed the correct ergonomic set up of her work environment to reduce
the strain
on her neck and surrounding areas.
[7] The respondent
obtained a Bachelor’s Degree in Natural Science, a Master’s
Degree in Natural Science, a Certificate
in Environmental Management
and completed a course in Applied Economics and an Environmental
Economics Executive Course. At the
time of the accident, she was
employed as a Deputy Director African Programme at South
South
North Projects (Africa) and remained in the position until her
resignation in 2013. After her resignation she became a self-employed
consultant.
[8] The respondent’s
case was that she sustained blunt trauma to the head, face and right
shoulder and had a cervical spine
extension trauma. She was admitted
to hospital and discharged on the same day after treatment. On 4
December 2011 she was treated
at Umhlanga Hospital which treatment
included pharmacological pain management. On 23 July 2013 she
underwent surgery following
symptoms related to thoracic outlet
syndrome. The surgery involved the removal of her first rib but she
still suffered with related
pain post-operatively. She presented with
a pain disorder which was permanent in her life. The quality of her
life had been significantly
and permanently compromised by the injury
and some 30% of her energy was consumed in managing her pain.
[9] The projection on the
respondent’s future business and earnings growth and the impact
of factors like market needs, competition,
economic climate and
others for purposes of properly quantifying the claim for loss of
earnings or earning capacity was in dispute.
The nature of the
disputes led to the procurement of a number of medico-legal reports
from various experts. In some instances the
parties procured joint
minutes between the experts. The dispute also remained as to general
damages, the nature and the extent
of the limitations that the
injuries caused on travel, work and income. As a consequence, the
quantum of the claim remained in
dispute. Attempts at settlement were
not successful. The matter was properly set down for trial on 7
December 2020 and both parties
were aware of the set down. When the
presiding judge noted the absence of representation for the
applicant, she caused the claim
handlers to be contacted and invited,
but the attempts did not produce any representation.
[10] The applicant was
absent and the judgment was made in default. The respondent, her
employer at the time of the accident, the
physiotherapist and the
actuary testified. The expert opinions of her occupational therapist
and the industrial psychologist were
tendered into evidence. Having
considered the papers and the evidence and having heard the
respondent’s counsel, Magona AJ
made the order against the
applicant in favour of the respondent. The order included payment of
R6 754 879-33 and the
rand equivalent of 353-41 British
pounds, an undertaking by the applicant to compensate the respondent
for future medical costs
in respect of the injuries, taxed or agreed
costs including costs attendant upon obtaining payment of the capital
amount, qualifying
expenses of identified expert witnesses, costs of
counsel, interest on the capital amount 14 days after the date of the
order and
on the costs 14 days after the date of taxation or
agreement of the costs. The respondent was declared a necessary
witness and
entitled to reimbursements of her travelling and
accommodation costs in respect of attending consultations with
experts and to
attend trial.
[11] The applicant
cancelled the legal panels and as a result its previous attorneys had
to withdraw from the record. The applicant
alleged that it was simply
unable to appoint another firm of attorneys. This inability is
unexplained. Furthermore, the applicant
relied on its claim handlers
to administer the claim, who the applicant knew, were not registered
by the Legal Practitioners’
Council and could not accordingly
represent the applicant in court. The applicant was aware of the set
down, and elected not to
be represented at the hearing. The
applicant’s own case is that the rescission is applied for,
primarily, because the quantum
is in excess of R5 million, and
because of the quantum the Chief Operating Officer is not prepared to
sign off on the payment.
[12] The applicant
alleged that its liabilities continue to grow under a restrained
economy and that although it showed a surplus
in the financial year
ending March 2021, it still has an accumulated deficit and actuarial
liability of billions of rands. It not
managed properly, its finances
may collapse, which will undermine the object of the RAF Act. This
will threaten the constitutional
rights of persons that suffer
injuries and death pursuant to the driving of motor vehicles
including their dependents. It is against
this background that the
applicant brought this application in the public interest as
envisaged in section 38(d) of the Constitution.
The alleged that it
is also motivated in this application, by the need to be assisted by
the courts to manage and fulfil its objects
and to pay fair and
reasonable compensation, determined by a fair legal process.
[13] In
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
(CCT 52/21)
[2021] ZACC 28
;
2021 (11)
BCLR 1263
(CC) (17 September 2021) it was said:
“
Our
jurisprudence is clear: where a litigant, given notice of the case
against them and given sufficient opportunities to participate,
elects to be absent, this absence does not fall within the scope of
the requirement of rule 42(1)(a). And, it certainly cannot
have the
effect of turning the order granted in absentia, into one erroneously
granted.”
In
Lodhi 2 Properties
Investments CC v Bondev Developments
2007 (6) SA 87
at para 27 it
was said:
“
[27]
Similarly, in a case where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled to
judgment in the absence of the defendant the judgment if
granted
cannot be said to have been granted erroneously in the light of a
subsequently disclosed defence. A Court which grants
a judgment by
default like the judgment we are presently concerned with, does not
grant the judgment on the basis that the defendant
does not have a
defense: it grants the judgment on the basis that the defendant has
been notified of the plaintiff’s claim
as required by the
Rules, that the defendant, not having give notice of an intention to
defende, is not defending the matter and
that the plaintiff is in
terms of the Rules entitled to the order sought. The existence or
non-existence of a defence on the merits
is an irrelevant
consideration and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a
validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment.”
[14] At para 103 the
court continued as follows in the
Zuma
matter:
“
If
our law, through the doctrine of peremption, expressly prohibits
litigants from acquiescing in a court’s decision and then
later
challenging that same decision, it would fly in the face of the
interests of justice for a party to be allowed to wilfully
refuse to
participate in litigation and then expect the opportunity to re-open
the case when it suits them. It is simply not in
the interests of
justice to tolerate this manner of litigious vacillation. After all,
that is why peremption has crystallised as
a principle of our law, …”
Earlier on in the
judgment the court had said from para 101:
“
[101]
It is trite that the doctrine of peremption finds application across
our legal landscape. The doctrine tells us that “[p]eremption
is a waiver of one’s constitutional right to appeal in a way
that leaves no shred of reasonable doubt about the losing party’s
self-resignation to the unfavourable order that could otherwise be
appealed against”.[77] The principle that underlies this
doctrine is that “no person can be allowed to take up two
positions inconsistent with one another, or as is commonly expressed,
to blow hot and cold, to approbate and reprobate”.[78]
Notwithstanding this, our law does allow for some flexibility where
policy considerations exist that militate against the enforcement of
peremption. [79] Although the doctrine has its origin in appeals,
the
doctrine and its principles do apply equally in the case of
rescission.
[102]
I have reservations about extending the application of the doctrine
of peremption to the present circumstances, where the
alleged
acquiescence occurred before the judgment was finalised. It is not
wholly fair to state that Mr Zuma acquiesced in the
judgment by
acting in a manner synonymous with an intention to abide by it. In
fact, as soon as the judgment was handed down, he
made every effort
to counter it.
[103]
Nevertheless, the underlying principles of peremption do resonate.”
[15] The applicant
brought this application under the common law. In
Chetty v Law
Society, Transvaal
1985 (2) SA 756
(A) at 764I – 765F it
was said:
“
The
appellant’s claim for rescission of the judgment confirming its
rule
nisi
cannot
be brought under Rule 31(2)(b) or Rule 42(1), but must be considered
in terms of the common law, which empowers the Court
to rescind a
judgment obtained on default of appearance, provided sufficient cause
therefor has been shown. (See
De
Wet and Others v Western Bank Ltd
1979
(2) SA 1031
(A) at 1042 and
Childerly
Estate Stores v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
1924
OPD 163.)
The term “sufficient cause” (or “good
cause”) defies precise or comprehensive definition, for many
and
various factors require to be considered. (See
Cairn’s
Executors v Gaarn
1912
AD 181
at 186
per
Innes JA.) But it
is clear that in principle and in the long –standing practice
of our Courts two essential elements of “sufficient
cause”
for rescission of a judgment by default are:
(i)
That the party seeking relief
must present a reasonable and acceptable explanation for his default;
and
(ii)
That on the merits such party
has a
bona fide
defence which,
prima facie,
carries
some prospect of success. (
De
Wet’s
case
supra
at 1042;
PE Bosman
Transport Works Committee and Others v Piet Bosman Transport (Pty)
Ltd
1980 (4) SA 794
(A);
Smith NO v
Brummer NO and Another; Smith NO v Brummer
1954
(3) SA 352
(O) at 357-8)
It is not sufficient if
only one of these two requirements is met; for obvious reasons a
party showing no prospect of success on
the merits will fail in an
application for rescission of a default judgment against him, no
matter how reasonable and convincing
the explanation of his default.
And ordered judicial process would be negated if, on the other hand,
a party who could offer no
explanation of his default other than his
disdain of the Rules was nevertheless permitted to have a judgment
against him rescinded
on the ground that he had reasonable prospects
of success on the merits.”
[16] Noting the
challenge, the applicant asked this court to consider using its
powers as envisaged in section 173 of the Constitution.
Section 173
of the Constitution reads as follows:
“
Inherent
power
173 The Constitutional
Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal and the High Court of South Africa
each has the inherent power to protect
and regulate their own
processes, and to develop the common law, taking into account the
interests of justice.”
[17] It seems to me that
the applicant’s Executives exaggerated their importance, so
much so that they elevate their views
and their designed processes to
be above the judicial system or Judiciary of the Republic or at least
a court order. During the
period 14 December 2020 and 29 March 2021
the applicant’s employees fed the claim into what is called
“requested not
yet paid system [RNYP]”, which appears to
be one of the electronic applications on the applicant’s
payment processing
systems. It is alleged to be “a system of
checks and balances introduced to avoid fruitless and wasteful
expenditure and
to ensure that the award made in respect of any claim
is fair and reasonable”.
[18] The applicant did
not earnestly attend to the litigation in this matter and did not
regard the 7
th
December 2020 as a date to intensely and
seriously engage the respondent in its dispute with her before Magona
AJ. The RNYP system,
this court was told, requires compilation of a
report, detailing the make-up of the award and the factors and
evidence that supports
such an award. The system also requires the
assessment and consent of different executive strata to ensure that
the award is fair
and reasonable. The system may be a good instrument
in the strategy to significantly reduce litigation costs and as a
tool to encourage
settlement of claims without the necessity of
litigation where it is avoidable. It can however not be competition,
if not some
review, assessment and monitoring system for the courts,
in disputed claims, on what is a fair and reasonable award. RAF
cannot
be players and off-the-field audio-visual referee in the same
game. RAF cannot be allowed to play hide when they are served with
court processes, and expect the applicant to join in the game and
play seek when the order is against RAF.
[19] RAF terminated the
mandate of its attorneys and elected not to be legally represented,
instead choosing to deal directly with
claimants and their attorneys
in this matter. The cosmetics of suspending claim handlers for not
attending the hearing, when RAF
itself said in the papers before the
court that such claim handlers have no mandate to attend and
represent RAF at the courts,
is simply meant to improve the
appearance of the Executives, but does not undo the hideous face of a
decision not to earnestly
engage with such a big claim before the
courts through representatives who by law could intelligibly add
value to the administration
of justice. In my view, the assessment,
evaluation and monitoring of claims, are all internal milestones
within a system which
require skills and structures, and should
happen as soon as a claim is lodged and not after judgment. Most
importantly where summons
have already been issued, such processes
must give due regard to court processes served on RAF.
[20] At para 99, it was
said in
Zuma:
“
[99]
The Commission, HSF and CASAC all persuasively demonstrated that any
development of the grounds of rescission would have profoundly
detrimental effects on legal certainty and the rule of law. I too,
cannot see how it would be in the interests of justice for this
Court
to expand the definition of “error” to provide for any
allegation of unconstitutionality. We must ponder the
possible
outcomes of doing so carefully, for if we do not, this Court might
soon find itself inundated with similarly unmeritorious
applications,
all raising any number of allegations of unconstitutionality. Lest we
wish to invite every litigant who has enjoyed
their day in this
Court, but nevertheless found themselves with an order against them,
to approach us again armed with a so-called
rescission application
that would have us reconsider the merits of their case, it is
sagacious to entertain this matter no further.
The principles of
finality and legal certainty lie at the heart of this case, and I
fear that significant damage has already been
done to these
principles.”
[21] Disputed claims are
determined in an adversarial litigation. Judicial oversight includes
some element of being inquisitorial,
however, our adjudication system
even where it has tenets of an enquiry persists with adjudication of
unsettled claims by way of
evidence. RAF introduced its own style of
engaging with our adversarial system of litigation, and was
comfortable to pursue their
case where for all intents and purposes
its employees made representations to the courts. The judicial
officer, in this case, invited
RAF and it did not come. RAF has a
duty to properly, competently and expeditiously evaluate claims and
settle them where possible.
Where there is a dispute, it is no better
than any litigant and deserve no specially demarcated lanes of due
process different
from other litigants. Because of large volumes of
RAF matters, courts have developed mechanisms to process the disputed
claims.
However RAF cannot, beyond these mechanisms, begin to write
its own laws.
[22] There is no basis to
convert our law of rescission to a new purpose and to especially
construct new principles which will start
to exist, simply to
accommodate RAF’s failure to attend court and, effectively
represented, to deal with a disputed claim
of an amount of more than
R5 million. The fact that RAF is an organ of State exercising public
power and performing a public function,
whose main object is to
ameliorate the plight of victims rendered vulnerable by modern
accidents, was no license to disregard a
court process. The
efficient, effective and economical administration of its resources
includes that Executives of RAF should acknowledge
its shortcomings
and allow RAF to be led by professionals where RAF’s own
competencies run short. Whilst measures to camp
fraud, corruption and
inflated awards are welcome, they cannot be a legitimate excuse to
disregard our courts.
[23] Development
inherently includes growth and advancement. It is different from
resurrection. The law of rescission require no
development under the
circumstances. It does not offend section 39(2) of the Constituion,
in my view. In essence, the applicant
require that its defence,
before Magona AJ made the order by default, be restored to life in
circumstances where it chose its own
processes at the expense of
judicial processes. The interests of justice require that those
called upon to answer a case, present
themselves and answer the case
at the appropriate court which called them. This enhances
effectiveness, efficiency, certainty and
finality of issues between
parties. The needs of a changing society do not present a contrary
view to these factors, which are
at the heart of the rationale behind
the exception provided by a rescission.
[24]The thinking of the
RAF on finality of its claims through judicial pronouncements is very
worrisome. It simply wants to have
the last word, even after a court
order. Paragraph 82 of its Heads of Argument reads:
“
82.
In this context, the applicant submits that the common law should be
developed to allow the applicant greater latitude in applications
for
rescission, even in circumstances where there has been some degree of
judicial oversight in the determination of the compensation
payable
to a claimant.”
Simply put, the common
law should be developed to allow that it should only be when RAF
accepts compensation payable to a claimant,
that a court order
becomes final. RAF pleads for a revolving door where it can circle
claimants around the axis, in our courts,
where it simply disregards
its obligation to attend court to have the issues determined after
hearing evidence.
[25] The default was
self-constructed. The ‘deliberate mistake’ of not
attending court was grounded on some stubborn,
militant and
ill-advised misdirection. The cosmetic make-up by Senior Counsel in
an attempt to cover it up notwithstanding, it
cannot please the
court, such that it is condoned under the guise of a ‘Constitutional
development of the common law’.
Courts cannot tolerate even the
slightest impression, especially from those seized with the
administration of public funds, that
there is a constitutionally
guaranteed right to plain stupidity. The message should be clear and
unequivocal, no one disregards
our laws and then creatively seek to
rewrite the legal prescripts to have a time of carefree fun in
litigation, especially with
the lives of the injured and vulnerable.
[26] For these reasons I
make the following order:
1. The application is
dismissed.
2. The applicant to pay
the costs on attorney and client scale, such costs to include the
costs of two counsel.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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