Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 208South Africa
Oliver N.O. v MEC for Health: Western Cape Provincial Department of Health and Another (18312/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 208; 2023 (2) SA 551 (WCC) (27 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Oliver N.O. v MEC for Health: Western Cape Provincial Department of Health and Another (18312/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 208; 2023 (2) SA 551 (WCC) (27 October 2022)
Oliver N.O. v MEC for Health: Western Cape Provincial Department of Health and Another (18312/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 208; 2023 (2) SA 551 (WCC) (27 October 2022)
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sino date 27 October 2022
FLYNOTES:
DECEASED PLAINTIFF AND LITIS CONTESTATIO
Civil
procedure – Litis contestatio – Claim for damages
arising out of medical negligence – Plaintiff passing
away
shortly after amendments to particulars – Amendments
re-opened pleadings – Litis contestatio fell away –
Non-pecuniary claims for general damages are non-transmissible to
the deceased’s estate before litis contestatio is
reached.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
[Reportable
I]
Case
No: 18312/2014
In
the matter between:
TASHREEKA
OLIVER
N.O.
Plaintiff
and
MEC
FOR HEALTH: WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
First
Defendant
THE
CITY OF CAPE
TOWN
Second
Defendant
Coram:
Mantame J
Heard:
06 October 2022
Delivered:
27 October 2022
JUDGMENT
MANTAME
J
Introduction
[1]
The issue mainly concerns the transmissibility of non-pecuniary
claims for damages
to the estate of Mrs Wareldiah Olivier
(“the
deceased”)
. In order to determine this issue, the plaintiff
requested this Court to develop the common-law and bring it in line
with the Bill
of Rights. Central for determination are the following
questions:
1.1
whether the amendment by the deceased of her particulars of claim on
4 October 2017 had the effect
of reopening the pleadings and that
litis contestatio
fell away;
1.2 if
litis contestatio
did fall away, and the pleadings are found
not to have closed as a result of the first defendant not yet filing
an amended plea
by the date of the death of the deceased, whether her
non-pecuniary claim for general damages was transmissible to her
estate;
1.3 whether
on the facts presented by the parties, the common-law principles
governing the transmissibility on non-pecuniary
claims for general
damages is inconsistent with the following provisions of the Bill of
Rights:
1.3.1 the right to equal
protection and benefit of the law in terms of section 9(1) of the
Constitution;
1.3.2 the right to bodily
and psychological integrity in terms of section 12(2) of the
Constitution;
1.3.3 the right of access
to quality health care services in terms of section 27 of the
Constitution;
1.3.4 the rights of
access to courts in terms of section 34 of the Constitution.
1.4 That, in
the event the common-law principles governing the transmissibility of
non-pecuniary claims for general
damages are found to be consistent
with the Bill of Rights, whether those principles give full effect to
the spirit, purport and
object of the Bill of Rights and particularly
to those provisions enumerated in paragraph 1.3 above and
1.5
whether the common-law principles governing the transmissibility of
non-pecuniary claims for general damages
ought to be developed in the
circumstances of this case.
[2]
In its opposition, the first defendant maintained that the
non-pecuniary claim is
not transmissible to the deceased’s
estate.
Background
Facts
[3]
The deceased instituted action for damages against the first
defendant arising out
of the alleged negligence of medical staff in
its employ, which negligence led ultimately to the amputation of her
leg on 17 October
2014.
[4]
The deceased claimed damages in the amount of R3 175 000.00
(erroneously stated as
R3 285 000.00 in the plaintiff’s
amended particulars of claim dated June 2015) as follows:
4.1
Past medical and hospital expenses in the amount of R5 000.00;
4.2
Future medical expenses in the amount of R2 170 000.00;
4.3
Loss of earnings in the amount of R50 000.00 and
4.4
General damages in the amount of R950 000.00.
[5]
At the hearing of this matter, this Court was informed that the
plaintiff to date
has effected four (4) amendments to their
particulars of claim. However, relevant for the determination of
issues in this matter,
is the third amendment of the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim on 4 October 2017. Pursuant to an unopposed
notice of intention
to amend dated 19 September 2017, the plaintiff
amended her particulars of claim by increasing her claim for future
medical and
hospital expenses to R6 105 000.00. Consequent
thereto, the quantum of her claim was increased to R7 155 500.00.
[6]
Shortly after the amendment was effected on 4 October 2017, the
deceased died on 9
October 2017. The deceased’s death occurred
prior to the expiry of the fifteen (15) day period afforded to the
first defendant
to file an amended plea in response to the amended
particulars of claim. The first defendant had not at that stage filed
an amended
plea and has not done so since. Nonetheless, the deceased
has been substituted by Tashreeka Oliver N.O as the plaintiff.
[7]
It is therefore common cause that pleadings were closed after the
joinder of the second
defendant and the filing of the amended
particulars of claim in January 2016. The disputed issues arose in
this matter after the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim were
amended on 4 October 2017.
Submission
by the parties
[8]
The plaintiff asserted that the issues for determination in this
matter are not new
in our courts. These principles were considered by
the Full Court of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg in
Nkala
and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Co Ltd and Others (“the Nkala
judgment”)
[1]
and the
common-law was developed to recognise the transmissibility of claims
for general damages to litigant’s estates should
they die
before
litis
contestatio.
[9]
According to the plaintiff, the amendment of the deceased’s
particulars of claim
was crucial and necessary at that stage. At the
pre-trial conference on 24 November 2016, the parties agreed to
appoint joint experts
to quantify the deceased’s claim for
purposes of settlement discussions. Three (3) experts were appointed
to prepare medico-legal
reports by 18 April 2017 for this purpose. On
23 August 2017, the joint experts had filed their medico-legal
reports. However,
the issue of both merits and quantum was still in
dispute. The plaintiff procured expert reports from three (3)
additional experts
and at this point, the parties were taking steps
in preparation for trial. On 14 September 2017, the deceased gave
notice of her
intention to amend her particulars of claim by
substituting the paragraph dealing with and itemising the future
medical and hospital
expenses claimed. The increases were prompted by
and based on expert reports of Mr Rossouw, the orthotist and
prosthetist; Ms Scheffler,
the physiotherapist and rehabilitation
consultant and Dr Versfeld, the orthopaedic surgeon.
[10]
The plaintiff contended that the deceased did not seek to amend any
aspect of the particulars
of claim beyond the quantum claimed for
future medical and hospital expenses. Her claim for general damages
remained the same as
it was on the date of issue of summons. The
first defendant did not object to the proposed amendment to the
particulars of claim.
The amended pages were accordingly delivered,
but the amendment was effected on 4 October 2017, five (5) days
before the death
of the deceased.
[11]
In opposing the issues raised by the plaintiff, the first defendant
stated that the pleadings
in effect constitute an agreement between
the parties as to the issues and claims to be determined by the
court.
[2]
An amendment of the
pleadings had the effect of setting aside this agreement on the
issues and the plaintiff’s claim by allowing
the amending party
to alter the issues or claims before the court. In essence,
litis
contestatio
is
the stage at which a claim becomes certain and fixed. The effect of
litis
contestatio,
which is reached when the pleadings in a case are closed, is to
‘freeze the plaintiff’s rights as at that moment.’
[3]
Litis
contestatio
or the agreement as to the issues and claim to be determined by the
court thus falls away until such time as the pleadings are
closed
once again.
[4]
[12]
In addition, Rule 29(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court deals
specifically with the stages at which
pleadings are considered
closed. The purpose of a claim for non-patrimonial losses arising out
of a delict is to compensate the
injured party personally for the
deterioration of highly personal legal interests that attach to his
or her body and personality.
[5]
It is intended for his or her personal benefit; it is not intended to
compensate
his or her heirs / estate.
[6]
[13]
In this instance, it was stated by the first defendant that the
plaintiff amended her claim against
the defendant and thereby opened
the pleadings on 4 October 2017 by filing her amended particulars of
claim. In terms of Rule 28(8)
of the Uniform Rules of Court, the
first defendant was entitled to plead to the amended particulars of
claim within fifteen (15)
days that is by 25 October 2017. However,
before the defendant could do so, thus effectively closing the
pleadings herein, the
plaintiff passed away on 9 October 2017.
[14]
The first defendant stressed that it is accepted in our law that such
a claim is not transmissible
to the heirs of the plaintiff unless the
plaintiff dies after
litis
contestatio
has
been reached but before the hearing of the action.
[7]
It was submitted that the reasoning behind this exception is that the
action through
litis
contestatio
acquires
somewhat of the nature of a contract in that the parties have agreed
on the issues and have agreed that the court will
adjudicate on the
said issues. This agreement on the issues gives rise to a
quasi-contractual obligation, which renders the claim
transmissible.
[8]
In this
instance, the effect of the plaintiff’s amendment of her
pleadings was that
litis
contestatio
fell
away and that consequently, her claim for non-patrimonial damages is
non-transmissible to her estate as a result thereof.
[15]
The first defendant admitted that the
Nkala
judgment is
distinguishable from this matter, in that the full bench in
Johannesburg dealt with a class action, which was faced
with some
procedural challenges (certification) which took forever to be
achieved. In such a situation, it developed the law to
conclude that
any claimant who had instituted a claim for general damages but who
had died before
litis contestatio
was achieved would be
entitled to pursue that claim. In other words, the claim would become
transmissible to his or her estate.
However, the minority judgment
disagreed with such a conclusion and was of the view that this
development should be made incrementally
and confined to class
actions only.
[16]
It was the first defendant’s considered view that a judgment
that has not been ruled upon
by either the Supreme Court of Appeal or
the Constitutional Court is not binding on this division in terms of
the
stare
decisis
principle
which states that in the interest of legal certainty and consistency
a court is bound by the decision of other courts
in their division
[9]
or the decision of a superior court
[10]
unless it is satisfied that the decision in question is clearly
wrong. A decision will be held to be clearly wrong where it has
been
arrived at on some fundamental departure from a principle, or a
manifest oversight or misunderstanding, that is, there has
been
something in the nature of a palpable mistake. It must be clear that
the earlier court erred or that the reasoning upon which
the decision
rested was clearly erroneous.
[11]
As stated by the first defendant, there is no suggestion by the
plaintiff that the courts in the aforementioned judgments were
clearly wrong in ruling as they did or that these judgments are not
binding on this Court.
[17]
It was the first defendant’s view that this Court should not
apply the reasoning in the
Nkala
judgment in this case for the
following reasons:
(a)
the facts of this case do not justify the development of the common
law as envisaged in the
Nkala
judgment;
(b)
the court in the
Nkala
judgment erred in extending the
development of the common-law to the law in general instead of
confining it to class action situations
only and
(c)
the impact on the public purse and the impact of the development of
the common-law to apply to all claims
for general damages as opposed
to those in class actions only on competing constitutional rights to,
inter alia
, public health care has not been considered.
[18]
The fact that the development of the common-law in this aspect was
unwarranted, said the first
defendant has been supported by two (2)
further cases,
i.e.
Nortje v Road Accident Fund
[12]
and
Ngubane
v Road Accident Fund
.
[13]
In
Nortje,
the court refused the plaintiff’s request to further develop
the common-law to allow transmission in such cases, on the grounds
that
first
,
the legislative intervention was the more appropriate route and
second,
the
plaintiff had in any event not placed sufficient evidence before the
court to provide sufficient factual support for the requested
development of the common-law. Whereas in
Ngubane
,
the court again refused to follow the majority decision in
Nkala
preferring the conservative approach taken by the minority. It held
that the majority’s blanket approach to the development
of the
common-law, with respect to the transmissibility of general damages
prior to
litis
contestatio
was
reached and went beyond the permissible realms of the judicial
development of the common-law and caused the judiciary to
impermissibly
infringe upon the realm of the legislature
(see
para [34])
.
A High Court, when faced with a proposed development of the common
law, has to apply caution, and consider the wider consequences
of the
change. The majority in
Nkala
failed
to do this
(see
para [38]).
The court further held that, as much as there may have been a need to
develop the common-law relating to the transmissibility of
actions
for general damages in respect of class actions, the same
consideration did not necessarily apply to a development of the
common-law generally in this regard. The court declared itself bound
to follow the generally accepted common-law position.
Discussion
[19]
The plaintiff suggested to this Court that, in considering and
determining the matter, it should
adopt a nuanced approach as it
acknowledged that in line with the trite doctrine of
stare decisis
the facts in this case, do not support the wholesale transmission of
Nkala
to this Court. However, the
Nkala
decision must
still inform the decision of this Court, even if it is not
prescriptive.
[20]
At the outset, this Court has to analyse whether the facts of this
matter support the outcome
that is sought by the plaintiff. This
Court is called upon to determine five (5) questions as stated in the
first paragraph of
this judgment. The
first,
is whether the
amendment of the plaintiff’s particulars of claim on 4 October
2017 had an effect of re-opening the pleadings
and that
litis
contestatio
fell away. The plaintiff has not disputed the fact
that
litis contestatio
is the stage at which a claim becomes
certain and / or fixed. Due to the fact that at that stage, the
parties were attempting to
settle the matter, it was agreed that
further expert reports be procured in order to quantify the
deceased’s claim. This
resulted in the deceased’s claim
for future medical and hospital expenses increasing and thereby
further increasing the quantum.
This necessitated the amendment of
the deceased’s particulars of claim.
[21]
When due consideration is had to the amended particulars of claim,
the amendments are substantial
and material. There are new aspects
that in my view would require some consideration. It may be so that
this increase in quantum
did not alter the cause of action, the
identity of the parties and the scope of the issues in dispute as it
was stated by the plaintiff.
Notwithstanding, the scope of damages
has been increased significantly and it would without a doubt require
a pleading. This Court
is unable to agree with the plaintiff that the
amendment did not redefine the issues in relation to the claim for
general damages,
as the amount remained the same. This assertion, in
my view is somewhat mischievous as it is not for the plaintiff to
prescribe
how the first defendant should conduct their defence. In my
view, the plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim re-opened
the pleadings and interrupted
litis contestatio and / or litis
contestatio
fell away. Since
litis contestatio
fell away,
the first defendant was yet to file its amended plea by the date of
the death of the deceased.
[22]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Endumeni
(supra)
[14]
affirmed this principle further when it stated that:
“
The answer is
that when pleadings are re-opened by amendment or the issues between
the parties altered informally, the initial situation
of litis
contestatio falls away and is only restored once the issues have once
more been defined in the pleadings or in some other
less formal
manner. That is consistent with the circumstances in which the notion
of litis contestatio was conceived. In Roman
law, once this stage of
proceedings was reached, a new obligation came into existence between
the parties, to abide the result
of the adjudication of their case.”
Melius de Villiers
explains the situation as follows:
‘
Through litis
contestation an action acquired somewhat of the nature of a contract,
a relation was created resembling an agreement
between the parties to
submit their differences to judicial investigation …’
[23]
In interpreting the above principle, Kruger J in
KS
v MS
[15]
said:
“…
Nor do
I understand the judgment of Wallis JA to mean that any amendment,
however immaterial or minor it may be, would result in
a fresh litis
contestatio. It is when the parties ‘‘add to or alter the
issues they are submitting to adjudication’’,
by
amendment or agreement, that ‘‘a new obligation’’
comes into existence and a fresh situation of litis
contestatio
arises”
.
[24]
The
second
question to consider is whether the deceased’s non-pecuniary
claims for general damages was transmissible to her estate.
Before
the
Nkala
judgment came into effect, the settled law has been that the claim,
lapses if the plaintiff or the defendant dies before
litis
contestatio.
Claims
under general damages are also not cedable, in any case not before
litis
contestatio.
[16]
[25]
It is therefore prudent to analyse this case before considering a
decision whether the deceased
non-pecuniary claims for general
damages are transmissible to the deceased’s estate. On 28
September 2013, the deceased’s
left leg above the knee
amputation was performed at Groote Schuur Hospital after her left leg
remained ischemic and unmanageable.
Following such a procedure, on 17
October 2014, the deceased instituted an action for damages against
the first defendant arising
out of an alleged negligence of medical
staff in its employ, which negligence led ultimately to the
amputation of her leg.
[26]
Most importantly, this Court was implored by the plaintiff to take
into account the realities
of modern litigation and recognize a right
to amend pleadings at any stage of the proceedings and move with the
times. The reality
is that at the date of demise of the deceased, the
deceased has already amended her pleadings three (3) times and the
ultimate
close of pleadings had been extended and delayed by at least
three (3) years. No explanation from the plaintiff as to why it took
so long for this litigation to finalise. It would be recalled that
the purpose for regulating the time frame on which to file pleadings
in accordance with the rules of court is for the proper management of
the proceedings. Without a proper and / or acceptable explanation,
it
would be irresponsible for this Court to find that non-pecuniary
claims for damages are transmissible to the deceased’s
estate
at any time before
litis contestatio.
That would be tantamount
to a blanket and/or open ended reward to the plaintiff for doing
nothing.
[27]
It would appear that the reasons put forward in the
Nkala
judgment motivating for the transmissibility of general damages to
the estate of the deceased are extremely distinguishable from
this
case
(see paras [176] – [222])
. I agree fully that the
transmissibility of general damages to the deceased’s estate
should be confined only to class actions.
This Court finds no
justification in extending more time and holding that the deceased’s
claim for general damages is transmissible
to her estate without any
basis put forward why the matter delayed to reach
litis
contestatio
. In my view, it is not enough to merely concentrate
at the stage when the parties were negotiating settlement and putting
forward
as motivation for the transmissibility of general damages to
the deceased’ estate. The period between 2014 to 2016 remains
unaccounted for. In fact, such a finding will encourage the
plaintiffs to sit on their cases and do nothing since there would be
no consequences to their non-actions. Instead, they would stand to
acquire benefits. In the absence of any factual matrix, there
is no
support for any finding that the deceased’s claim for general
damages is transmissible to her estate.
[28]
With regard to the
third
question, whether on the facts
presented by the parties, the common-law principles governing the
transmissibility of non-pecuniary
claims for general damages is
inconsistent with Sections 9(1), 12(2), 27 and 34 of the Bill of
Rights. This, in my view would require
a closer scrutiny of facts.
The plaintiff contended that equality and particularly, the right to
equal protection and benefit of
the law as enshrined in section 9 of
the Constitution is guaranteed. Had the quantum claimed for general
damages not been amended,
there is no question that
litis
contestatio
would be uninterrupted and the claim for general
damages remain intact. The application of a different set of
principles that disentitle
the deceased and her estate to claim
general damages as a result of an amendment that has no bearing on
that claim would amount
to an arbitrary distinction between a
plaintiff in the former scenario, and one in the latter.
[29]
In circumstances where the plaintiff was party to the dragging of her
heels, it is inconceivable
how the distinction between pre and post
litis contestatio
would be held to be an arbitrary distinction
between the plaintiffs former and current scenario. If parties were
to stick to the
rules of court in exchanging pleadings, it would not
take more than three (3) months at the most for
litis contestatio
to be reached. In my view, this distinction is unjustified. In any
event, although this point was taken in
Nkala
, it was not
challenged and the majority found that the legal process would have
failed them by discriminating between the deceased
and their fellow
claimants based on the uncontrollably lengthy period of time to reach
litis contestatio
. In circumstances where the deceased claimed
as an individual, and thereafter dragged the proceedings, it is not
clear who she
is weighing herself against. Surely, it would not be
with the other plaintiffs who prosecuted their cases to finality
timeously.
In this instance, it was incumbent upon the deceased to
prosecute her case timeously. There is not any other person to blame
in
this scenario other than herself. I find it to be no merit in this
complaint.
[30]
The plaintiff argued that the bar against pursing a claim for general
damages arising from a
breach of right to bodily integrity would
amount to a denial of a remedy for the breach of section 12(2) of the
Constitution. After
the demise of the deceased, it is not clear
whether the estate of the deceased is at liberty to pursue the
increased scope of general
damages based on the right to bodily
integrity. Section 12 guarantees ‘freedom and security of
persons’ in their living
state. It guarantees “
the
right to bodily and psychological integrity, which includes the right
–
(a)
to make decisions concerning reproduction;
(b)
to security in and control over their body; and
(c)
not to be subjected to medical or scientific experiments without
their informed consent”.
In
this scenario, the plaintiff instituted a claim timeously upon
establishing that there was an alleged medical negligence that
was
committed by the medical personnel of the first defendant. There was
no allegation that her bodily integrity was threatened
in any way or
was subjected to medical or scientific experiments without her
consent. In the result, there is no justification
to raise this
constitutional principle as motivation for transmission of the
deceased claims for general damages to her estate.
[31]
The plaintiff fails to appreciate that the general damages that are
claimed have aspects that
needs consideration by the first defendant.
Affording fair opportunity to another party nor a finding that
litis
contestatio
fell away, does not amount to a denial of a remedy
nor a bar against pursuing a claim for general damages. Similarly,
section 27
of the Constitution would not exclude the plaintiff’s
general damages and / or amount to a denial of a remedy of the breach
of section 27 of the Constitution. The deceased had access to health
care services while she was still alive. Even if that would
not be
the case, the plaintiff would still be entitled to what has been
pleaded and proven during trial. In the same vain, the
fact that this
matter served before this Court is an indication that the plaintiff
has always had access to Courts in terms of
section 34 of the
Constitution. Likewise, these complaints are unfounded. In the
circumstances, the constitutional rights cited
by the plaintiff are
unsupported by factual allegations, and therefore the common –
law principles governing the transmissibility
on non-pecuniary claims
for general damages do not offend the full effect of the spirit,
purport and object of the Bill of Rights.
[32]
This then brings this Court to the last question on whether the
common-law principles governing
the transmissibility of non-pecuniary
claims for damages ought to be developed in the circumstances of this
case. In
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security & Another (Centre for Applied
Legal Studies Intervening)
[17]
the Constitutional Court held that:
“
It needs to be
stressed that the obligation of Courts to develop the common law, in
the context of the s 39 (2) objectives, is not
purely discretionary.
On the contrary, it is implicit in s 39 (2) read with section 173
that where the common law as it stands
is deficient in promoting the
s 39 (2) objectives, the Courts are under a general obligation to
develop it appropriately. We say
a ‘general obligation’
because we do not mean to suggest that a court must, in each and
every case where the common
law is involved, embark on an independent
exercise as to whether the common law is in need of development and,
if so, how it is
to be developed under s 39 (2)”.
[33]
This, in my view calls for a serious investigation and / or judgment
call on the Courts faced
with this question. It should be recalled
that the claim amongst others for general damages is intended to
compensate the injured
party personally for the deterioration of
highly personal legal interests that attach to his or her body and
personality. It is
not intended to increase her estate which has not
suffered a pecuniary loss as a result of this deterioration or to
benefit his
heirs who have not experienced the loss of amenities of
life or the pain and suffering that the claimant experienced. If that
is
taken into account, the development of common-law might prove to
have a wider detrimental effect in the formulation of delictual
remedies than what the plaintiff envisaged.
[34]
It is common cause that if due regard is had to the doctrine of
stare
decisis
, this Court is not obliged to follow the
Nkala
judgment to the extent that it extended the transmissibility of
general damages in general. However, since this Court was asked
to
consider the
Nkala
judgment in the determination of this
aspect, it is therefore sensible that it deals with it. As stated
previously the facts in
Nkala
are distinguishable to this
case. The class action was about the attempts by the vulnerable
mine-workers between 17 000 –
500 000 who were
employed in the gold mining industry and their dependants to obtain
compensation as a result of them having
contracted silicosis and / or
TB while employed in the gold mines. Due to the bulk of these
claimants, the application for two
(2) classes (silicosis and TB)
took about four (4) years for the certification to finalise. It was
for this reason that the constitutional
imperatives to develop the
common-law to afford the transmissibility of general damages to the
deceased’s estate came to
the fore. In this case, there are no
competing constitutional circumstances that demands a similar
intervention.
[35]
This drastic shift came about after the settled law has been that a
claim for general damages
is not transmissible to the deceased’s
estate if
litis contestatio
has not been achieved. The wider
consequences on the proposed change on the common-law should be
properly analysed. A development
of law in a blanket fashion without
proper consideration of other aspects like, susceptibility to abuse,
sustainability on the
economic sphere and the public purse,
lackadaisical attitude on the part of the plaintiffs to pursue their
claims and so on, in
my opinion would not always prove to be the
right approach to pursue. The Courts have been cautioned not to flex
their muscles
and develop the law at their whim. The Courts have to
exercise a value judgment when deciding whether to develop the law,
as each
case has to be decided on its merits. However, the courts
have been cautioned repeatedly not to overstep the line between
incremental
development of the existing legislation and the
formulation of wholly new ones at its peril, even though at times it
might be desirable
to do so. The concept of
stare decisis
or
the application of settled principle to new situations is very long
standing.
[36]
In
MEC
for Health and Social Development, Gauteng v DZ obo WZ
[18]
,
the Constitutional Court when it dealt with the development of common
law set out the inquiry as follows:
‘
[The court]
must be clear on: (1) what development of common law means; (2) what
the general approach to such development is; (3)
what material must
be available to a court to enable the development; and (4) the limits
of curial, rather than legislative, development
of the common law”
.
[37]
In this case, it is my considered view that there are no factual
allegations justifying a departure
from the settled principle. There
are absolutely no glaring inconsistencies with the plaintiff’s
stated constitutional provisions
and / or an indication that the
common law rule falls short of the spirit, purport and objects of the
Bill of Rights.
[38]
The Constitutional Court in
MEC
for Health and Social Development, Gauteng v DZ obo WZ,
[19]
(supra),
warned
that a development of the common-law cannot take place in a factual
vacuum. This therefore means that, I repeat any development
of the
common-law requires factual material upon which the assessment
whether to develop the law must be made.
[39]
For these reasons, it is my careful consideration that the
plaintiff’s case for the development
of common-law should not
succeed.
[40]
In the result, the following order is made:
40.1 The amendment
by the deceased of her particulars of claim on 4 October 2017 had the
effect of reopening the pleadings
and that
litis contestatio
fell away;
40.2 The
non-pecuniary claims for general damages are non-transmissible to the
deceased’s estate before
litis contestatio
is reached;
40.3 The common-law
rule as it stands does not offend the spirit, purpose and object of
the Bill of Rights and therefore does
not require development.
40.4 The plaintiff
is ordered to pay costs.
MANTAME
J
WESTERN
CAPE HIGH COURT
Coram:
B P MANTAME, J
Judgment
by:
B P MANTAME, J
FOR
PLAINTIFFF: ADV N
STEIN
011 263
9000/0825287232
nikki@nstein.co.za
Instructed
by: Malcolm
Lyons & Brivik
Inc.
Mr T Brivik
021 425 5570
tzvi@lyonsbriviklaw.com
FOR
DEFENDANT: ADV M IPSER
021 423 4647
melanie@ipser.co.za
[1]
Nkala and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Co Ltd and Others 2016 (5) SA
240 (GJ)
[2]
De Villiers, Law of Injuries, quoted with approval in Jankowiak &
Another v Parity Insurance Co (Pty) Ltd
1963 (22) SA 286
(W) at 288
F - H
[3]
Government of the RSA v Ngubane
1972 (2) SA 601
(A) at 608D
[4]
Natal
Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
at para 15
[5]
Van Der Merwe v The Road Accident Fund & Others (Women’s
Legal Centre Trust as Amicus Curiae)
[2006] ZACC 4
;
2006 (4) SA 230
CC at 39
[6]
Hoffa N.O. v SA Mutual & Fire General Co Ltd
1965 (2) SA 994
(C)
at 955 C - D
[7]
Hoffa (supra); Milne N.O. Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1969 (3) SA 353
(AD) at 358 A – C; Government of the RSA v Ngubane (supra)
[8]
De Villiers, Law of Injuries, quoted with approval in Jankowiak &
Ano v Parity Insurance Co (Pty) Ltd (supra) at 288H; Natal
Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (supra) at para 15.
[9]
Hoffa (supra)
[10]
Milne, Ngubane and Endumeni (supra)
[11]
Patmar Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development
Tribunal and Others
2018 (4) SA 107
at para 3
[12]
2022 (4) SA 287 (KZD)
[13]
2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ)
[14]
At
para [15]
[15]
2016
(1) SA 64
(KZN) at para [16]
[16]
Neethling, Potgieter and Visser, Neethling’s Law of
Personality at pg 79
[17]
[2001] ZACC 22
;
2001
(4) SA 938
(CC) at para
[39]
[18]
2018
(1) SA 335
(CC) para 27
[19]
2018 (1) SA 335
(CC) at para 28, 29, 57 - 58
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