Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 168South Africa
J.B obo D.B and Another v Road Accident Fund (13777/2016) [2022] ZAWCHC 168 (2 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
2 September 2022
Judgment
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## J.B obo D.B and Another v Road Accident Fund (13777/2016) [2022] ZAWCHC 168 (2 September 2022)
J.B obo D.B and Another v Road Accident Fund (13777/2016) [2022] ZAWCHC 168 (2 September 2022)
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sino date 2 September 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
no: 13777/2016
In
the matter between:
J[....]
B[....]
on
behalf of
D[....] R[....]
B[....]
First Plaintiff
ZAYTOEN
CORNELISSEN
Second Plaintiff
Duly
appointed as Curatrix ad litem to
A[....]
J[....]2
B[....]
(“The Patient”)
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
10 and 11 August 2022
Delivered
electronically:
2 September 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
The only remaining issue in this claim for damages
arising from a personal injury is the percentage contingency to be
applied in
respect of the patient’s past and future loss of
earnings. Given that he is represented by a curatrix ad litem I will,
for
sake of convenience, refer to him as A[....].
[2]
On 10 July 2015, A[....] along with his
mother and younger brother sustained injuries when the driver of the
vehicle in which
they were travelling as passengers failed to stop at
a T-junction in the Botriver area and thereafter lost control.
A[....]’s
mother and brother also sustained injuries, but his
were far more severe, and the two neurosurgeons appointed by the
parties respectively,
namely Drs Edeling and Parker, concluded that
A[....] (who was born on 5 April 1998 and was 17 years old at
the time of the
accident) suffered a severe closed traumatic brain
injury with intra-cranial haemorrhage and features of diffuse axonal
injury.
[3]
Action was instituted against the defendant
(“RAF”) on 2 August 2016 by A[....]’s mother
in her personal
capacity and on behalf of his younger brother, as
well as A[....] himself. As previously mentioned a curatrix ad litem
was subsequently
appointed to represent and assist A[....] in this
litigation. The RAF, having properly conceded the merits (given that
all three
were passengers) agreed to an order which was granted on
2 September 2021 which resolved the claims of A[....]’s
mother
and brother and in addition certain of A[....]’s claims.
[4]
His
claim for general damages was settled in the sum of R1.8 million and
he was furnished with the usual statutory undertaking for
future
treatment in terms of s 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund
Act
[1]
. As far as his claim for
past medical and related expenses is concerned, this was postponed
for a short period for quantification,
and subsequently agreed in the
sum of R534 706.84.
[5]
The two industrial psychologists appointed by the
parties respectively, namely Mr Benade and Dr Rungqu-Mshumpela,
agreed
in a joint minute that A[....]:
5.1
Left school as a result of his injuries during 2015 when he was in
grade 11;
5.2
Would otherwise have completed grade 12 in 2016 and thereafter
studied towards a tertiary qualification
(diploma/degree);
5.3
Most probably would thereafter have managed to progress in his career
and reached his career ceiling at the
age of 45 to 50;
5.4
Would have commenced his career earning at the Paterson B5 band in an
operational position, progressing to
the Paterson C3 band in an
advanced skills position, and reaching his career ceiling at the
Paterson C4 band in an advanced operational
position at the age of
45;
5.5
Would have retired at the age of 65; and
5.6 Is
unemployable in the open labour market.
[6]
These two experts also agreed to adopt the
earnings levels contained in Koch: The Quantum Yearbook 2022 as
follows:
6.1 In
2020, at age 22, R383 000 per annum, with straight line
increases to the age of 31;
6.2
From 2030 until 2043, from age 32 to 45, R596 000 per annum with
straight line increases; and
6.3
From 2043 until 2063, from age 45 to 65, R710 000 per annum with
Consumer Price Index increases.
[7]
In addition, after conclusion of the evidence and
argument, the parties agreed that A[....]’s past loss of income
(as at 11 August
2022) is R600 200, as well as the amount
to be awarded for future loss of income, depending upon the
percentage contingency
to be applied to both as determined by the
court, in accordance with a revised actuarial calculation provided by
Mary Cartwright
Consultants CC. (The assumptions made by the actuary
are not contentious, it having been agreed that they are assumptions
usually
made in these types of matters).
[8]
The evidence adduced on behalf of A[....] was that
of Ms Mignon Coetzee, a registered clinical and
neuropsychologist with particular
expertise in neuropsychology, and
Mr Benade. The RAF closed its case without adducing evidence.
Given the extent of agreement
between the industrial psychologists,
it is not necessary to deal with Mr Benade’s evidence, save to
state that in his opinion
A[....] is not only unemployable in the
open labour market but also in a sheltered and sympathetic work
environment, having regard
to the report and testimony of Ms Coetzee
which I deal with below.
[9]
Ms Coetzee testified that she carried out her
assessment of A[....] on 9 May and 2 August 2019 to determine the
nature, extent and
severity of any psychological and/or
neuropsychological sequelae of the injuries sustained by him. She was
informed by A[....]’s
mother that he had a normal delivery, was
a healthy infant and reached all his developmental milestones within
the normal range.
At the time of the accident, when A[....] was at
school in grade 11, he had successfully completed each academic year.
After the
accident he did not return to school as he underwent a
protracted period of rehabilitation. In 2016, A[....] was enrolled in
a
grade 12 equivalent learnership program, but he did not complete
it. He has not been employed in the formal labour market.
[10]
Ms Coetzee referred to the conclusion reached by
Drs Edeling and Parker in relation to A[....]’s injuries. She
administered
the South African normed Wechsler Adult Intelligent
Scale test, and A[....] obtained scores for verbal and performance IQ
within
the average range (61
st
percentile). The index scores varied from the 10
th
percentile (processing speed) to the 82
nd
percentile (perceptual organisation).
[11]
Her evidence was further that estimating
pre-morbid cognitive functioning forms an integral part of any
neuropsychological evaluation.
An estimate of A[....]’s
intrinsic, pre-morbid cognitive potential was reached by considering
his higher scores on current
testing as well as his pre-morbid
developmental history. In her opinion, pre-morbidly, A[....] would
have had the cognitive potential
to matriculate and obtain a tertiary
qualification. As previously indicated, this is what the two
industrial psychologists also
concluded.
[12]
Ms Coetzee found that A[....] has enduring
cognitive difficulties, but it was evident from the distribution of
scores across a range
of tests that there are preserved areas of
intellectual capacity. However, A[....] also presents with
significant neuropsychological
deficits, especially in the domain of
executive function. As executive abilities allow one to plan,
organise and successfully execute
adaptive, goal-directed and
future-orientated actions, this is an impairment which significantly
obstructs A[....]’s ability
to utilise his inherent
intellectual potential in an effective manner.
[13]
In her opinion, A[....]’s deficits are such
that they preclude him from being gainfully employed as well as
leading an independent
life in future. His executive deficits in
particular are a major obstacle in terms of his work ability even
within a sheltered
and sympathetic work environment.
[14]
The following opinions expressed by Ms Coetzee in
her report and subsequent testimony are of particular relevance in
placing the
extent and impact of A[....]’s deficits in
perspective.
[15]
His preserved intellectual capacity in a sense
makes it more difficult for A[....] to cope with his executive
dysfunction (coupled
with his physical and emotional difficulties)
since he is aware that, but for these, he would be capable of
achieving so much more.
He has ‘
a
deep understanding of being lost in his own head…’
and is ‘
very
aware of the inconsistency of his brain function, which is typical of
a frontal lobe injury… There is a flicker of light
but it
cannot go on’.
[16]
When she asked A[....] to reflect on any
difficulties he experiences on a day-to-day basis, he stated that the
constant ‘
fluctuation’
in his brain is a problem for him. He is very
easily distracted, and cannot concentrate for long. He used to be an
avid reader (Ms Coetzee
gave examples of his advanced
vocabulary) but as he cannot stay focused he can only now manage to
read short passages. He described
marked fluctuations in his ability
to focus on tasks. No matter how hard he tries to stay on course, it
is as if his mind will
not let him. He forgets to do things.
Afterwards he feels bad, as he does not mean to be forgetful. He
added that some days are
better than others in this regard. He
sometimes misreads or mispronounces words and, according to
Ms Coetzee, he has pronounced
expressive difficulties.
[17]
During the course of her assessment, A[....]
launched into a lengthy and convoluted discussion of his personality,
using the novel
Lord of the Flies
as a point of reference. He stated that his
personality ‘
was fractured by the
accident’
, and that ‘
pieces
are slowly coming back together again’
,
although in Ms Coetzee’s opinion, this was overly
optimistic on A[....]’s part. He likened himself to the
character
Piggy, who was, in his words, ‘
loyal,
intelligent and pure’.
However,
since the accident, he has become a different person, more like
Ralph, the original, ill-fated leader in the story. He
stated ‘
Ralph
was the leader. It was the face I put on, like in the book they
killed Ralph… I was robbed. No matter how good you
are, bad
will happen’.
In Ms Coetzee’s
opinion this demonstrates a looseness of association in A[....]’s
speech, coupled with valuable
content about his subconscious, inner
stresses.
[18]
It also explains why A[....] dropped out half-way
through the grade 12 alternative learnership course, having described
himself
as intellectually advanced compared to his fellow learners;
and why he also dropped out only two months into an alternative
program
which his mother managed to procure for him.
[19]
The collateral information provided by A[....]’s
mother reinforced Ms Coetzee’s opinions. His mother
reported that
it takes A[....] a long time to formulate what he wants
to say and, even then, he delivers in a stop-start fashion. He never
used
to have any hesitation in terms of his speech, and was in fact
quite articulate with an excellent vocabulary. He struggles to
function
in group settings. It is A[....]’s mother’s
opinion that his slowed speech causes him to drop out of the
conversation.
By the time he has formulated what he wants to say, it
has already moved to the next topic. He has problems in understanding
what
other people mean, unless they keep their communication simple
and straightforward. He cannot retain instructions unless they are
written down, and has difficulty in terms of thinking ahead, planning
and problem-solving and making decisions. He finds it hard
to stop
repeating what he is saying or doing and is easily distracted.
[20]
Ms Coetzee also noted that about a year after the
accident A[....] became severely depressed. He explained to her that
the onset
of his depression was precipitated by the realisation that
he would never be able to attend a matric dance. It appeared to Ms
Coetzee
that, while on one level A[....] has this deep understanding
of his deficits, he also expresses unrealistic expectations about his
future, which is indicative of the ‘
disconnect’
and demonstrates the complexity of his condition
as well as its devastating, permanent consequences to A[....].
[21]
In Ms Coetzee’s opinion A[....]’s most
severe impairment lies in his behavioural and personality changes as
a result
of his brain injury. He is slightly detached from reality,
has impulsive and poor social judgement, and his major drawback is
his
executive dysfunction. As she put it, even though A[....] ‘
has
intrinsic receptive ability he is not able to use it’
because of his profound executive deficits.
[22]
Her evidence was further that A[....] displays
signs of depression. He is ‘
socially
adrift and clearly lacked peace of mind’
.
Based on what was observed about the content and structure of his
thought processes, he is considered vulnerable to more severe
mental
illness. There are two elements which are strong indicators of this.
The first is that the level of his insight into his
losses is enough
to cause psychiatric illness. The second is that the nature of his
brain injury is such that he is in any event
highly susceptible to
such an illness, and it is very unlikely that he will respond
adequately to treatment.
[23]
According to Ms Coetzee, research shows that it
usually takes around 8 years post-injury for the full realisation to
dawn on the
affected individual that this is permanent and, coupled
with the ‘
dream world’
he occupies, there is a concern that this could
lead to psychosis.
[24]
During cross-examination Ms Coetzee was referred
to the report of educational psychologist Dr Pinchuck who was
appointed by A[....]’s
attorneys and conducted his assessment
on 15 September 2016 when A[....] was 18 ½ years old. Dr
Pinchuck’s mandate
as reflected in his report was ‘
to
determine his current intellectual strengths and weaknesses as well
as future potential’.
[25]
After having conducted various tests Dr Pinchuck
concluded that A[....]: (a) has good verbal, visual and spatial
reasoning
skills; (b) experiences word reading, phonics and
reading comprehension difficulties which affect his ability to learn;
and
(c) has difficulty with short timed fine-motor tasks
including his writing. Dr Pinchuck also concluded that
nonetheless,
and with assistance, A[....] had the ability to complete
a 3 to 4 year tertiary qualification.
[26]
Ms Coetzee’s response was as follows. Dr
Pinchuck as she understood it assessed A[....] to identify areas of
deficits and
weaknesses in the event that he pursued tertiary
studies. A[....] had not even completed grade 11 at the time of that
assessment.
She assessed A[....] roughly 3 years later and had
approached her assessment, not from the perspective of an educational
psychologist,
but from that of a neuropsychologist, i.e.:
‘…
how
the brain changes due to a brain injury, so one looks at a much
broader range of cognitive domains… to ascertain how
a person
will function in life. This goes well beyond IQ and learning
difficulties. So while I’m in agreement with Dr Pinchuck
in
terms of
[A[....]’s]
intellectual
potential and learning difficulties, the neuropsychology of what
underpins these difficulties is broader – and
that broader
foundation in A[....]’s case involves processing speed
difficulty, attention difficulty and most importantly
executive
dysfunction… His failed attempts at completing courses
demonstrate how his executive dysfunction derails his attempts
to
reintegrate into society.’
[27]
When asked to explain the nature of A[....]’s
preserved intellectual capacity in light of the scores he achieved in
the tests
administered by Ms Coetzee, she replied that achieving a
score on a subtest in a controlled clinical space only tells half the
story. The other half entails determining whether the preserved
intellectual capacity can be used in a way that makes for a
productive
life. In her words ‘
his
residual intellectual ability is actually pretty useless to him
because of his predominant executive deficiencies’.
[28]
Turning
now to the applicable percentage contingency deduction. In
D’Oliviera
v RAF
[2]
it was
stated that:
‘
[8]
The purpose behind applying a contingency deduction in an award for
damages is to take account of the unpredictable “vicissitudes
of life”. These include—
“
the
possibility that the plaintiff may in the result have a less than
‘normal’ expectation of life; and that he may
experience
periods of unemployment by reason of incapacity due to illness or
accident, or to labour unrest or general economic
conditions.”
The
quantification of the extent of the contingency lies entirely within
the discretion of the court and must be determined upon
the court’s
impression of the case. In fixing the contingency deduction, a court
will have regard to objective factors present,
common logic, expert
evidence and the like.’
[29]
Also relevant is the monetary limit or “cap”
set by s 17(4)(c) of the Road Accident Fund Act which, along
with
other amendments, came into operation on 1 August 2008.
This provides in relevant part as follows:
‘
(4)
Where a claim for compensation under subsection (1) –
.
. .
(c)
includes a claim for loss of income or support,
the
annual
loss
,
irrespective of the
actual
loss
, shall
be proportionately calculated to an amount not exceeding---
(i)
[Rx] per year in the case of a claim for loss of income; and
(ii)
[Rx] per year, in respect of each deceased breadwinner, in the case
of a claim for loss of support.’
[emphasis
supplied]
[30]
In terms of s 17(4A)(a) the amounts referred
to in the subsection are determined by notice in the Government
Gazette, and adjusted
quarterly in order to counter the effect of
inflation. In addition, in terms of s 17(4A)(b) the applicable
cap is that as
‘
set out in the
last notice issued prior to the date on which the cause of action
arose’.
[31]
In
RAF
v Sweatman
[3]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal, confirming that the “Morris method”
should be followed, stated that:
‘…
Accordingly,
following the Morris method, if in each year after the accident the
actual loss exceeds the annual loss determined
at the date of the
accident, the Fund is liable to pay only the lesser amount –
the annual loss...’
[32]
This was the approach taken by the actuary in the
present matter. In a supplementary report, the actuary stated that:
‘
The
limit just prior to the accident (with no inflationary adjustment)
applies to the loss of income each year, net of tax and after
the
application of contingency deductions, mortality and discounting. As
the accident occurred on 10 July 2015, the limit
as at 1 May
2015 applies, i.e. R228 430 per annum.’
[33]
The reference in the report to “contingency
deductions” is to the range helpfully provided by the actuary
in quantifying
what sum is to be paid to A[....] depending on the
percentage determined by the court. The earnings bands agreed upon by
the industrial
psychologists have been used. The calculations also
include those to which the cap has already been applied in arriving
at the
net amounts.
[34]
Mr Corbett SC
who
appeared for A[....] submitted that the appropriate contingency
deduction should be 20%, in light of the following positive
and
negative factors:
30.1 A[....] (given
his pre-morbid intellectual capacity) may have followed a career path
which would have entailed a higher
income than that predicted by the
industrial psychologists;
30.2 He may also
have progressed more rapidly or favourably than they predicted;
30.3
He is currently 24 years old and, adopting the approach favoured by
Koch,
[4]
a
deduction of 0.5% per annum would equate to 20.5% in respect of
future loss of income until his anticipated retirement age of
65
(i.e. 41 years x 0.5%); and
30.4 The ordinary
vicissitudes of life such as accident, illness or unemployment, which
in any event could have occurred.
[35]
On the
other hand
Mr
Goosen
who
appeared for the RAF submitted that the appropriate contingency
deduction should be 35%. He emphasised that the Koch approach
is a
guideline only; that in
Bee
v RAF
[5]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal made clear that ‘
the
younger the
[accident]
victim,
the longer the vicissitudes of life will operate and the greater the
uncertainty in assessing the claimant’s likely
career path’
;
and placed reliance on the decision in
RAF
v Kerridge
[6]
where
the appeal court increased a contingency deduction from 15% to 35%.
[36]
I am
mindful that the Koch approach is a guideline only, but it cannot be
gainsaid that it is a useful one, and has been quoted
with approval
by at least one other court in this Division.
[7]
I also
acknowledge, and am of course bound by, what the Supreme Court of
Appeal had to say in
Bee.
[37]
As far as
Kerridge
is concerned, the factors appear to have been
materially different from those in the matter before me. At the time
of the accident
Mr Kerridge was 23 years old. He was enrolled at
a Technical College training to be a motor mechanic. It was common
cause
that a National Training Certificate (N1) is the equivalent of
a Technical grade 10, N2 the equivalent of a Technical grade 11 and
N3 the equivalent of Technical grade 12 or matric. Up to that point
Mr Kerridge had taken 7 years to complete his N1 certificate
and had
passed only 2 courses towards his N2 certificate, despite being
described by his wife as ‘
diligent
and dedicated’
.
[38]
The majority of the court found it could not
accept the scenarios postulated by the industrial psychologist who
testified on Mr
Kerridge’s behalf, since he had assumed that
Mr Kerridge would complete his N3 within three years of the
accident and
thereafter enter the job market, progressing
commensurately in the years that followed until he reached his career
ceiling. The
court stated:
‘
[47]
…These are highly optimistic assumptions. Based on his past
academic endeavours, the likelihood that Mr
Kerridge would have
obtained an N3 in that time period, or at all, is in my view remote.
The undisputed evidence of Mr De
Vos, a qualified motor mechanic
and businessman with 24 years of experience in the motor industry in
the Port Elizabeth area, was
that after an N3 qualification it would
take a person approximately two and a half years to do the voluntary
trade test. The major
dealerships which he had contacted required an
NTC3
[i.e.
N3]
Grade
12 with Mathematics and Science to qualify as a diesel mechanic. None
would employ anyone with an N1…
[55] In
this matter there are various considerations which impact on the
contingency deduction. Firstly, Mr Kerridge
was 23 when the collision
occurred on 28 November 2009. He has a greater chance of being
subjected to the vicissitudes of life.
Further, given his limited
employment history, there is greater uncertainty in assessing his
career path. Mr Kerridge has no real
work record. Since failing Grade
9 and leaving school at the age of 15 in 2001 he attended…
College in 2002 and 2003. He
and his brother helped his father in
their laundry business. There is no evidence of how long they ran the
business while their
father was ill in January 2003. Mr Kerridge
assisted in the laundry business in 2004 and 2006 to 2009. There is
also no evidence
as to whether he worked every day in his father’s
laundry, or the nature and extent of that work. At the time of the
collision
Mr Kerridge did not have good prospects of achieving
success in his field, as is evidenced by his academic record referred
to above.
And he is particularly subject to normal negative
contingencies relevant to a wage earner such as employability and
loss of employment.
Secondly, his pre-morbid earnings have, in my
view, been inflated, even on the so-called conservative scenario, for
the reasons
set out above. Finally, there is undoubtedly some
residual earning capacity which was not considered.’
[39]
In the instant matter it cannot seriously be
disputed, in light of the evidence of Ms Coetzee, that A[....]
was pre-morbidly
possessed of an intellectual capacity that excluded
the prospect of a slow progression in whatever his chosen career path
might
have been. Accepting this, one cannot ignore the possibility,
as
Mr Corbett
submitted,
that A[....] may have earned a higher income and progressed more
rapidly and favourably than predicted by the two industrial
psychologists.
[40]
What also needs to be factored into account is
that, unlike Mr Kerridge, A[....] is not ‘
particularly
subject to normal negative contingencies relevant to a wage earner
such as employability and loss of employment’.
Moreover, unlike Mr Kerridge, the experts
have all agreed that A[....] has no residual earning capacity
whatsoever.
[41]
As
pointed out by the minority in
Kerridge
,
[8]
a 15%
contingency for future loss of earnings has become accepted as
‘
normal’
.
By applying a 20% contingency deduction, this too takes A[....]’s
youth into consideration when it is balanced against the
other
positive factors. It is also slightly less than 20.5% adopting the
Koch approach. Accordingly, and having regard to all of
the above, I
am unable to agree with
Mr
Goosen
that
a 35% contingency deduction would be appropriate, and find that one
of 20% is fair, reasonable and just.
[42]
On 11 March 2022 an order was granted by agreement
in terms of which an interim payment was made by the RAF of R1.2
million, to
be set off against the final amount ‘
either
as agreed between the parties or proven’.
The
order that follows takes this interim payment into account.
[43]
The following order is made:
1.
The defendant shall pay to the second plaintiff
the sum of R8 030 406.84, calculated as follows:
1.1
R534 706.84 in respect of past hospital
and medical expenses; and
1.2
R8 695 700 (after having applied a
20% contingency deduction to past and future loss of income)
less
the interim payment of R1 200 000 in
terms of the order granted by agreement on 11 March 2022 (“the
March order”).
2.
Save as already dealt with in the March order,
the defendant shall pay the second plaintiff’s costs of suit,
on a party and
party scale, including the costs of the postponement
of the trial on 7 March 2022, the fees of one senior counsel,
and the
reasonable and necessary qualifying expenses of the following
expert witnesses:
2.1
Dr Herman Edeling, neurosurgeon;
2.2
Ms Mignon Coetzee, neuropsychologist;
2.3
Ms Celeste Jordaan, occupational therapist;
2.4
Dr Carol Legg, speech and language therapist;
2.5
Dr David Pinchuck, educational psychologist;
2.6
Mr Johan Benade, industrial psychologist; and
2.7
Mary Cartwright Consultants CC.
3.
The payment provisions contained in paragraph 4
of the March order shall apply to paragraphs 1 and 2 above.
J
I CLOETE
For
applicant
:
Adv Peter
Corbett
SC
,
424 0981, 083 556 9418,
corbett@capebar.co.za
;
Instructed
by
:
Malcolm Lyons & Brivik Inc., T Brivik, 425 5570, 082 7788844,
tzvi@lyonsbriviklaw.com
.
For
respondent
:
Mr
Flip Goosen RAF attorney
Claims
Handler Mr Brett
Lategan
(RAF), 408 3435, 064 766 7377,
BrettL@raf.co.za
.
Ref:
503/12299615/53/0, Link no. 3723117578072
Instructed
by
:
[1]
No.
56 of 1996.
[2]
2019
(2) SA 247
(WCC) at para [8].
[3]
2015
(6) SA 186
(SCA) at para [12].
[4]
Quoted
with approval in
D’Oliviera
(
supra
)
at para [10].
[5]
2018
(4) SA 366
(SCA) at para [116].
[6]
[2019]
1 All SA 92 (SCA).
[7]
See
fn 4
supra
.
[8]
At
para [30].
sino noindex
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