Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 36South Africa
L.R v Road Accident Fund (4917/2008) [2023] ZAKZDHC 36 (30 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
30 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## L.R v Road Accident Fund (4917/2008) [2023] ZAKZDHC 36 (30 June 2023)
L.R v Road Accident Fund (4917/2008) [2023] ZAKZDHC 36 (30 June 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NUMBER: 4917/2008
In
the matter between:
# L[...]
R[...]
PLAINTIFF
L[...]
R[...]
PLAINTIFF
and
# ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGEMENT
# GABRIEL AJ
GABRIEL AJ
## The Claim and Issues
The Claim and Issues
1.
The applicant lodged a claim against the
defendant arising from injuries he sustained on 12 June 2005.
At that time the plaintiff was 11 and a
half years old.
By
the time the matter came to trial, the plaintiff had turned 29:
approximately 18 years had elapsed since the injury to the plaintiff.
2.
This matter was first set down for three
days from 24-26 April 2023.
When
the matter was called before me, it became apparent that the issues
between the parties were limited.
3.
The Road Accident Fund (“Fund”)
conceded liability on an apportionment of 80:20 percent in favour of
the plaintiff.
I
learnt subsequently that general damages had been agreed upon and
settled between the parties.
Further,
on 23 February 2023, the Fund agreed to make an interim payment of
R1.6 million to the plaintiff, subject to its own conditions.
With regard to past medical expenses, the
plaintiff submitted its vouched claim, in the amount of R358 145.82
to the Fund but the
Fund had not by then confirmed whether it
admitted that claim.
4.
Further, counsel for the parties informed
me that the respective experts, the occupational therapists and
industrial psychologists
on behalf of each party, had met and had
recently signed a joint minute stipulating their agreed assumptions
and opinions.
That
bundles was handed up to me and marked exhibit “A”.
5.
The Fund sought condonation for the late
filing of its expert reports of Pratibha Bhagwan an occupational
therapist and that of
Dr Zandile Madlabana-Luthuli an industrial
psychologist.
By
the end of argument, counsel for the Plaintiff indicated that the
application for condonation was not opposed, save that the
issue was
relevant for the purposes of the punitive costs order sought by the
Plaintiff.
6.
The
joint minute agreed to by the parties' occupational therapists on 22
April 2023, reflected that they had had regard to the medical
records
from Netcare Umhlanga Hospital, and to extensive medico-legal reports
compiled by a range of professionals which included
an orthopaedic
surgeon, neurosurgeon and two neuropsychologists obtained from the
time of the accident to September 2014.
In
addition, Ms Sewraj, the occupational therapist for the plaintiff,
also had regard to the medico-legal report compiled by industrial
psychologist, Mr S Krishna dated 7 March 2023.
[1]
7.
The joint minute agreed by the parties'
industrial psychologists was finalised on 23 April 2023.
These professionals had also considered
various medico- legal reports applicable to and compiled in respect
of the plaintiff's claim
from the Fund, as they related to his
injuries arising from the accident.
8.
I return to these reports later.
9.
Therefore, when the matter was called
before me, the sole issues remaining for determination related to:
(a)
the pre-accident contingency applicable to
the calculation of the plaintiff's earnings, had the accident not
occurred; and
(b)
whether
the
plaintiff
has
any
residual
earning
capacity
(post-accident) and if so, the contingency
applicable to this calculation.
10.
I enquired from counsel for the defendant,
why the matter had been set down for three days, given the broad
areas of agreement between
the parties' respective expert
occupational therapists and industrial psychologists.
11.
I was advised that there had been delays in
the Fund securing reports from its experts but that these experts had
nevertheless met
that very weekend so that the joint minutes could be
presented at the trial.
12.
It then emerged that counsel and the
attorney for the defendant had yet to receive instructions on whether
the defendant agreed
with the scenarios and assumptions identified by
the experts in their respective joint minutes.
This legal team also indicated that they
were still awaiting instructions on the issue of contingencies and
‘injured earnings.’
13.
I was concerned about the 18-year delay in
the resolution of the plaintiff's claim.
I
regarded that period of time as unusually long for anyone to wait to
receive the benefit of what is essentially a social security
scheme.
14.
This is particularly so given that the Road
Accident Fund operates as a social- security scheme, and it has been
long established
that:
“
The
Act constitutes social-security legislation whose primary object has
been described as 'to give the greatest possible protection
. . . to
persons who have suffered loss through a negligent or unlawful act on
the part of the driver or owner of a motor vehicle'.”
[2]
15.
If the Fund had not opposed the matter,
then the matter may well have proceeded without opposition and I have
no doubt that the
matter would have been resolved long before the 18
years it took for the matter to come trial.
Yet, the matter had been set down for three
days and the Fund had still not provided instructions to its own
legal team.
16.
Notwithstanding the explanation that there
had been delays in the Fund obtaining reports from the occupational
therapist and the
industrial psychologist engaged by it, those
experts had made the effort to agree joint minutes between them
during the course
of the very weekend before the trial.
17.
The effect of the areas of admission in
these joint minutes was settled by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
March 2018, that is, approximately
five years before the trial was
called before me:
"…
Since it is common for experts to agree on some matters and disagree
on others, it is desirable, for efficient case
management, that the
experts should meet with a view to reaching sensible agreement on as
much as possible so that the expert testimony
can be confined to
matters truly in dispute.
Where,
as here, the court has directed experts to meet and file joint
minutes, and where the experts have done so, the joint minute
will
correctly be understood as limiting the issues on which evidence is
needed.
If
a litigant for any reason does not wish to be bound by the
limitation, fair warning must be given.
In
the absence of repudiation (ie fair warning), the other litigant is
entitled to run the case
on
the
basis
that
the
matters
agreed
between
the
experts
are
not
in
issue."
[3]
18.
I issued an Order on 24 April 2023
directing the defendant to provide instructions to its legal team by
14h30 on that day, and I
instructed the legal team for the defendant
to explain the consequences to the Fund of it not complying with such
order.
In doing
so, I noted that there had already been:
(a)
a plethora of medico-legal reports obtained
by the parties during the ensuing 18 years; and
(b)
two orders issued by the court during
February 2023 and March 2023 obliging the Fund to take steps to
facilitate the resolution
of the plaintiff's claim.
19.
Miraculously, when the matter resumed at
14h30 on 24 April 2023, counsel for the defendant informed me that
they had received instructions
from the Fund.
Counsel for the defendant placed on record
that her instructions were to accept the findings made by the experts
in the joint minute
and to accept the assumptions reflected therein
(exhibit “A”).
20.
I was then provided with three volumes, to
be used during the course of trial, handed
to
me
by
the
Plaintiff.
Although
those
volumes
made
reference
to
actuarial calculations for the plaintiff and for the defendant, those
calculations had not been included at that time.
These were subsequently provided to me.
21.
The mother of the plaintiff, S[...] R[...]
was the only witness called at trial.
22.
Mrs R[...] testified generally about the
family, the family's educational qualifications, the fact that her
son's sister has done
relatively well in her academic path and that,
prior to the accident, her son was on track to passing his school
examinations and
moving onto post-school academic opportunities. In
other words, Mrs R[...] testified that her son, L[...] R[...], was a
normal
young man prior to the accident when he was 11 and a half
years old.
23.
Mrs R[...] testified generally about the
change in her son before and after the accident.
Mrs R[...] testified that the only fully
functional limb that her son has at present is his right hand.
Most of his other limbs had to have pins
inserted into them.
Mrs
R[...] testified that the pins which remain cause her son great pain,
particularly during cold weather.
24.
L[...] R[...] has difficulty using his
prosthesis and this causes blisters when her son uses it, making it
uncomfortable.
Even
with crutches, her son has fallen and broken his nose twice.
Mrs R[...] testified that her son spends
most of his time in a wheelchair at home.
25.
Mrs R[...] explained that her son has
become moody, depressed, he has failed at school and in his further
attempts at obtaining
academic qualifications.
L[...] R[...] leads a solitary existence,
apart from his family and he has no friends.
26.
Mrs R[...] testified that her son has not
sought employment in the open market.
Her
evidence was that his depressed state makes this impossible, his
physical limitations, limited concentration levels and his
levels of
pain would make it very difficult, if not impossible, for him to
secure employment in the open market.
27.
The family has tried to give their son some
reason to feel valued, by asking him to do various administrative
tasks in his father's
diesel mechanic business. Mrs R[...] testified
that her son is barely able to cope with these basic administrative
tasks, loses
interest quickly and is unable to concentrate. When this
happens, he gives up and goes home.
28.
Mrs R[...] also testified that she started
giving her son a monthly allowance of between R5,000 to R7,000 per
month, from her funds,
so that he is able to feel that he is
'earning' something for the tasks in the family business.
She explained that she also wants her son
to make his own decisions about spending that money for his needs and
to encourage him
to feel a sense of independence.
29.
Mrs R[...] explained that the family's
diesel mechanic business is the only means of income for the family.
She and her husband are six years away from
retiring.
When
they retire, L[...] R[...] will be unemployable on the open market.
30.
In cross-examination, Mrs R[...] agreed
that her son's lacerations on his head had healed and that he had not
required an operation
for his head injuries.
31.
It
was put to Mrs R[...] that more effort could have been made by the
family to secure earlier psychological assistance for L[...]
R[...],
which would have prevented or at least reduced the extent of her
son's psychological deterioration.
[4]
Mrs
R[...] explained that the family had sought therapeutic assistance
for their son but that they had no money for that treatment
beyond a
year.
32.
In cross-examination, Mrs R[...] accepted
that the Fund had made an interim payment and had given an
undertaking to pay medical
expenses.
In
respect of the interim payment, she testified that this money had
been used for her son's immediate medical needs.
33.
In re-examination Mrs R[...] explained that
the undertaking by the Fund to pay proved medical expenses had only
been made in 2016,
some 11 years after her son's accident.
She explained further that an interim
payment received by the Fund had been used to meet her son's
immediate medical needs, such
as obtaining the prosthesis and
removing the pins in his limbs.
34.
Mrs R[...] testified that prior to the
undertaking and interim payment from the Fund, the family paid for
L[...]’s medical
expenses and that they had little money
leftover for any further treatment for him.
35.
In
my
view,
Mrs
R[...]
was
a
clear,
genuine
and
credible
witness.
Her evidence and the manner in which she
delivered it, conveyed not only her anguish but also her quiet
resignation as a mother,
who had done all she and the family possibly
could have done to assist their son, with the limited resources at
their disposal
and despite the belated assistance from the Fund. I
have no difficulty in accepting her evidence in all respects.
## Further Hearings and
Argument
Further Hearings and
Argument
36.
After evidence in the trial had been led, I
called for further argument and submissions from the parties on the
issue of "gratuitous
payments" or "benevolent
earnings."
This
arose from my research into matter and arising from the treatment of
these concepts in the cases which follow.
I
asked counsel for further submissions with respect to these concepts
and their treatment in those decisions.
I
also asked counsel for further information including a chronology of
the litigation steps that had been taken in the matter since
the
claim had first been instituted in court.
37.
Counsel provided me with their further
written submissions and the further information requested.
A further hearing was held on 4 May 2023
for counsel to argue these additional matters.
I am grateful to counsel for their further
assistance in this regard.
38.
After hearing argument on this issue, I
advised the parties of my decision in respect of the disputed
contingency issues.
In
my view, the plaintiff has no residual earning capacity so the issue
of contingencies does not arise.
In
respect of the calculation based on past loss of earnings, I
considered that a 5% contingency deduction pre-accident and 15%
contingency deduction post-
accident were appropriate
in and fair with respect to the plaintiff. I asked counsel to have
their actuaries determine the final
amounts based on these figures
and to provide those and their final draft orders to me thereafter.
39.
Those calculations and a draft order were
provided to me on 22 May 2023.
40.
I came to my decision on the following
bases.
## Occupational Therapists
Joint Minute
Occupational Therapists
Joint Minute
41.
The joint minute by the occupational
therapists reflects their agreement that the plaintiff sustained the
following injuries as
a result of the accident:
(a)
a fracture to his left humerus;
(b)
a right tibia/fibula fracture;
(c)
a traumatic amputation of the right foot;
(d)
a fracture to the left tibia/fibula; and
(e)
a mild head injury.
42.
The
occupational therapists agree that the plaintiff has "serious
mobility challenges," as a result of various injuries
to his
limbs his balance is compromised, he suffers phantom limb pain, there
is significant muscle atrophy at the right thigh and
knee and that he
has "mood, volitional and self-esteem disturbances."
[5]
In
the result, they agree that the plaintiff's "overall physical
work capacity will now be significantly impacted."
43.
The occupational therapists agree that the
plaintiff's "neurocognitive deficits" limited the
plaintiff's ability to continue
his academic or learning career and
that he will fall into the "unskilled category," he will
require sedentary work but
his ability to secure that work "will
be significantly difficult" as he does not have the necessary
"work knowledge
and skill."
44.
The joint minute records that the
plaintiff's "neurocognitive deficits will hamper his ability to
cope with this type of work."
45.
Both occupational therapists agree that the
plaintiff's "only occupational experience is positioned as an
administrator on
an ad hoc basis at his father's company in a
sympathetic/compassionate capacity" and they "agree that
[the plaintiff]
is only suited to sympathetic employment with the
necessary supervision and preferably in this current environment."
46.
From an analysis of this minute, the
evidence of the plaintiff's mother and on a conspectus of the
evidence as a whole, I have no
difficulty concluding that the
plaintiff is unemployable, other than in his present sympathetic and
ad hoc employment at his father's
diesel mechanic business.
47.
My
conclusion
is
fortified
by
the
joint
minute
filed
by
the
parties'
industrial psychologists.
## Joint Minute of
Industrial Psychologists
Joint Minute of
Industrial Psychologists
48.
This minute is dated 23 April 2023.
49.
These
experts
considered the
previous
medical
reports
prepared
in the
matter.
50.
As with the minute of the occupational
therapists, I summarise only the essential features of that minute
and their conclusions.
51.
On the plaintiff's pre-accident earning
potential, the industrial psychologists recorded their areas of
agreement as follows.
52.
The industrial psychologists agree that
"had the accident not occurred, the claimant had the potential
to pass matric and enrol
for tertiary studies towards a Diploma level
study."
53.
The
industrial psychologists agree in the formulae applicable to
plaintiff's earning potential in the uninjured state.
[6]
54.
On the post-accident scenarios, the
industrial psychologists agree that after the accident, the
plaintiff's academic progress declined
and that he failed Grade 10,
which he passed on the second attempt.
The
plaintiff failed Grade 11 and then left school.
55.
Although the plaintiff enrolled for further
studies, the N2 in Electrical Engineering, he failed all his modules
and discontinued
this course of study.
56.
They agree that it is unlikely that the
plaintiff would have passed Grade 12 and that his physical
disabilities would restrict his
vocational options.
57.
In so far as the plaintiff's further
earning capacity is concerned, the industrial psychologists record
their view that the plaintiff's
"vocational ability is
significantly jeopardised:"
"Realistically,
L[...] is 29 years old with no work skills and he would have to
compete with other able-bodied persons and
hence he would have
difficulty finding a sympathetic employer … Furthermore,
should he not find suitable employment within
a sympathetic
environment, there is a greater chance that he could remain
unemployed."
58.
Following on this, those experts' view is:
"We agree that the
claimant may continue with his compassionate and ad hoc engagement as
an administrator at his parent's business
earning an allowance until
his parents turns 65 and opt to retire and therefore the claimant's
compassionate engagement will come
to an end."
59.
The industrial psychologists agree that
once the plaintiff's parents retire (in six- years' time), "the
claimant may remain
unemployed thereafter."
60.
The report goes on to present certain
formulae with respect to such compassionate employment.
## Conclusion on
Post-Accident Earning Capacity
Conclusion on
Post-Accident Earning Capacity
61.
In my view, the evidence is overwhelmingly
clear that the plaintiff has no future earning capacity.
62.
I have no difficulty concluding on the
evidence before me as a whole that the monthly allowance that the
plaintiff presently receives
is a gratuitous benefit which ought to
be excluded from his claim against the Fund.
63.
Similarly, I have no difficulty concluding
that that the fact that the plaintiff is asked by his parents to
perform administrative
tasks at his father's business, arises more
out of a sense of sympathy for their son and their parental need to
give him a sense
of worth and value in his adult life, rather than as
a result of any actual value that the plaintiff brings to that
business.
I am of
the view that this must be left out of his claim against the Fund.
64.
I am supported in this conclusion by the
clear principles which have emerged in this regard in:
(a)
Bee v Road Accident Fund
2018
(4) SA 366
(SCA), at paragraphs 100- 104, read with the authorities
cited in footnote 2; and
(b)
the
decisions in
Fulton
v Road Accident Fund
2012(3)
SA 255 (GSJ) (Full Bench), at paragraph 59.
[7]
65.
It follows that I therefore agree with
Counsel for the plaintiff (Mr Aboobaker SC) that the money that the
plaintiff receives from
his mother constitutes gratuitous payments
and the limited administrative tasks performed in the family business
constitute gratuitous
or benevolent employment, which must be
excluded from the calculation of the plaintiff's earning capacity and
his claim against
the Fund.
66.
On this basis, I therefore have no
difficulty rejecting the actuarial calculation presented to me by the
Fund, on this issue.
That
actuarial calculation flowed from instructions from the Fund that the
plaintiff has residual earning capacity, whereas I have
found that he
does not.
67.
As to the actuarial calculation presented
by the plaintiff, the parties are in agreement that a continency
deduction of 5% ought
to be applied to the pre- accident calculation
of past loss of earnings and that such figure is generally consistent
with previously
decided cases.
68.
Where the parties disagree is on the
continency applicable in respect of the post-accident component of
the past loss of earnings
calculation.
69.
I have had regard to the principles
established by the appellate courts which guide my discretion in this
matter.
I have
also had regard to comparable cases presented to me by both counsel,
including the latest guideline reflected in the 2023
edition of
Koch's
Quantum Yearbook.
70.
In my view, an appropriate contingency
deduction on this aspect is 15%.
71.
As noted, I advised counsel on 4 May 2022
to provide me the calculated figures based on the respective
contingencies of 5% and 15%
respectively with respect to the
calculation of past earnings.
72.
That calculation was provided to me on 22
May 2023 and it is reflected in the Order at the end of this
judgment.
Other matters
73.
There remain the following additional
issues.
74.
I asked the parties to provide me with a
chronology of the litigation steps in this matter from the time the
claim was instituted
in court.
The
plaintiff provided that chronology.
75.
That chronology of events reveals the
shocking extent of needless delays caused by the Fund.
It seems to me that somewhere along the
line the Fund may have forgotten that it exists to administer a
social security scheme,
which is funded by taxpayers.
If the litigation chronology in this matter
is anything to go by, then it would appear that the Fund believes
that it is dispensing
its own largesse, as opposed to serving the
public through a publicly funded social security scheme.
76.
Apart
from this, the Fund appears to believe that it may routinely instruct
counsel and legal practitioners to oppose matters without
proper
instructions.
[8]
This is a
flagrant abuse of the court system and of court procedure. Taxpayers'
pay for the functioning of the courts and wasting
time in court
constitutes a waste of taxpayers' money.
The
public is therefore bearing a double burden because of the apparent
ineptitude of the Fund.
77.
If
I am correct in this assessment, then the Fund has failed its social
assistance mandate, at least in so far as L[...] R[...]
is concerned.
And,
this is leaving aside for a moment the avalanche of decided cases
from courts in this country, which collectively depict a
Fund which
is consistent in only one respect it seems, that is, to obstruct,
retard and fail to render its social assistance mandate.
The
Fund is subject to the values in our Constitution, which
require
that
it
perform
its
public
assistance
functions
openly,
transparently and diligently.
[9]
78.
Nevertheless, on the facts and the
chronology presented in this case, I am satisfied that the applicant
ought not to be deprived
of the costs that he and his family have had
to incur in this litigation.
I
therefore intend to make an award in favour of the applicant with
attorney client costs, as is set out in the Order at the end
of this
judgment.
79.
The Act makes provision for payment of
these claims to be made within a period of 14 days.
Nevertheless, the Fund has had notice of
the terms of my proposed order from 4 May 2023 and there can be no
prejudice to it if it
is kept to this statutory payment standard but
relaxed upon the payment terms required by the Plaintiff and on the
dates set out
in the Order at the end of this judgment.
80.
The Order I make is therefore based on the
final draft Order submitted to me by the parties, on 22 May 2023.
Accordingly,
I
grant the following Order
:
1.
Judgment is granted in favour of the
Plaintiff in the sum of R5 357 018.44.
2.
Interest is payable on the aforesaid sum at
the rate of 11.25% per annum upon any sum unpaid upon the expiry of a
period of fourteen
(14) days from the date of this judgment.
3.
The aforesaid sum of R5 357 018.44 shall be
paid in three instalments (including interest) the first payment to
be made within 14
days of the date of this Judgment, and thereafter
on the corresponding day of the next two months.
4.
All amounts payable under this order shall
be paid directly into the account of the Plaintiff’s Attorneys
the details of which
are set out below:
Account
Name: PG Naidoo & Associates
Incorporated Account No:
2[...]
Branch
code: 0[...]
(Overport City Branch) Bank:
Standard Bank
5.
It is recorded that the Defendant has
delivered to the Plaintiff an Undertaking in terms of
Section 17
(4)
(1) (a) of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 1996
, for the payment of all
costs of the Plaintiff’s future accommodation in a hospital or
nursing home or treatment of or rendering
of a service or supplying
of goods to the Plaintiff resulting from the injuries sustained by
him in a motor vehicle accident on
the 12 June 2005, after such costs
have been incurred and upon proof thereof. The undertaking shall be
limited to 80% of such costs.
6.
It is recorded that the issue of the
quantum of past medical expenses has not yet been resolved and will
be determined at a separate
hearing if not agreed between the
parties.
7.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the costs
of this action including costs to date and reserved costs (if any) on
the attorney and
client scale such costs to include:
7.1
the costs attendant upon the obtaining of
the payment of the amounts referred to in paragraph 1;
7.2
the costs consequent upon the employment of
Senior Counsel such costs to include the costs of preparation limited
to 3 days;
7.3
the costs of Senior Counsel for preparation
and attendance at the pretrial conference;
7.4
the costs of obtaining the medico-legal
reports (and supplementary reports, if any) provided to the Defendant
and where applicable
the reasonable preparation, qualifying,
reservation, joint minutes, and appearance fees of the following
experts as indicated below:
a)
Dr G Govender – Neurosurgeon; (report
only)
b)
Nirvernie Elder & Associates –
Neuropsychologist; (report only)
c)
Prof Theophuilus Lazarus – Clinical
Psychologist; (report only)
d)
Huda Ebrahim – Speech and Language
Therapist; (report only)
e)
Dr Niel van Eeden Inc – Orthopaedic
Surgeon; (report only)
f)
Brenda Talbot – Educational
Psychologist; (report only)
g)
Rob McCann – Industrial Psychologist;
(report only)
h)
Areshnie
Sewraj
–
Occupational
Therapist
(preparation
and
qualifying fees);
i)
Sashini
Krishna
–
Industrial
Psychologist
(attendance
fee
on
24
April 2023, preparation, qualifying and appearance fees); and
j)
ARCH Actuarial Consultants (actuarial
reports only).
7.5
the costs of the said experts and the
Plaintiff’s legal representatives (attorney and counsel) for
consultation between the
experts and the said representatives;
7.6
the costs of perusal by the Plaintiff of
the Defendant’s medico-legal reports and any addendum thereto
and the joint minutes
of the following experts where applicable:
a)
Collen Kisten – Occupational
Therapist;
b)
Gideon De Kock – Industrial
Psychologist;
c)
Pratibha Bhagwan – Occupational
Therapist; and
d)
Dr Zandile Madlabana – Industrial
Psychologist.
7.7
The costs of preparing the summaries of the
reports of each of the experts as required by the Practice Directive.
8.
The Plaintiff is directed, in the event of
agreement not being reached on the questions of costs:
a)
to serve the Notice of Taxation on the
Defendant; and
b)
to allow the Defendant thirty (30) days to
make payment of the taxed costs.
10. The Defendant
is directed to pay interest on the taxed costs referred to in
paragraph 7 hereof at the rate of 11.25% per
annum calculated from
the date of allocatur to date of payment.
(CIRCULATED
ELECTRONICALLY TO THE PARTIES AS AGREED)
Gabriel AJ
30
June 2023
# CASE INFORMATION:
CASE INFORMATION:
DATE
OF HEARINGS:
23-24
April 2023
4
May 2023
(final
Orders received on 22 May 2023)
# DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
# 30
JUNE 2023
30
JUNE 2023
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Mr
T Aboobaker SC
Instructed
by:
PG
Naidoo and Associates REF: NM/rg/HC1162
FOR
DEFENDANT:
Ms
K Bheemchund
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, KZN Ms P Chetty
Link
Number: 1753201
[1]
Ms
Sewraj had regard to the report of the industrial psychologist Ms S
Krishna dated 7 March 2023, after the compilation of her
report.
The
joint minute records that Ms Sewraj’s assessment and findings
of her medico-legal report remained the same and is consistent
with
it.
[2]
Mvumvu
and Others v Minister of Transport and Another
2011
(2) SA 473 (CC).
[3]
Bee
v Road Accident Fund
2018
(4) SA 366
(SCA) at paragraph 66.
See
also
the
comments at paragraph 67 to the effect that "…[T]he
object should be just adjudication, achieved as efficiently
and
inexpensively as reasonably possible.
Private
funds and stretched judicial resources should only be expended on
genuine issues."
[4]
No
evidence of this nature was led by the Fund, nor did any of the
joint minutes point to any concrete steps which could have
been
taken in this regard and what the possible outcome of those further
steps might have been with respect to L[...] R[...]’sdepressed
psychological condition.
[5]
These
are set out in the respective minute dated 22 April 2023, in greater
detail than I have summarised in this judgment.
[6]
Set
out at paragraph 2, page 8, where it is noted,
inter
alia
,
that the plaintiff would have entered the labour market at the
Meridian Quartile as per Stats SA earnings at the level of education
for persons with a Grade 12 level of education and with a Diploma in
the formal sector at the early stage of his career.
These
industrial psychologists agree that there would have been straight
line increases thereafter, with annual and inflationary
increases
until the normal retirement age of 65.
[7]
See
also
the
decision in
Coughlan
v Road Accident Fund
2015
(4) SA 1
(CC), where the Constitutional Court held that child foster
grants and child support grants must be excluded from loss of
support
claims which arise from the death of a breadwinner.
This
was upon the basis,
inter
alia,
that
"the purpose of the RAF is to give the greatest possible
protection to claimants" (at paragraph 59).
[8]
I
know so, because I had several such matters on my roll during the
court of my stint as an Acting Judge.
Young,
inexperienced junior counsel were sent to court without instructions
from the Fund.
This
places an impossible burden on those legal practitioners who are
officers of the court.
In
most of these matters I had to issue Orders directing the Fund to
provide instructions to their legal teams.
There
are many decisions deploring this conduct by the RAF elsewhere in
the country.
[9]
It
need only remind itself of the founding values in section 1 of the
Constitution, the principles binding organs of state to
the Bill of
Rights and the general standards applicable to the public
administration in section 195 of the Constitution.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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