begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZASCA 17
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Road Accident Fund and Others v Hlatshwayo and Others (724/2023; 724B/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 17; [2025] 2 All SA 333 (SCA) (5 March 2025)
Road Accident Fund and Others v Hlatshwayo and Others (724/2023; 724B/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 17; [2025] 2 All SA 333 (SCA) (5 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2025_17.html
sino date 5 March 2025
FLYNOTES:
RAF
– Costs –
De
bonis propriis
–
CEO
and Board of Road Accident Fund – Late settlement of claims
– Judge President constituting full court to inquire
into
reasons for delay – Where Board not joined to the
proceedings – Whether costs properly granted in light
of
indemnity provision in
section 15(3)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act
56 of 1996
– Whether malice on part of CEO and the RAF board
established – Whether RAF to be held liable for the costs of
the inquiry.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No:724/2023
and 724B/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
FIRST
APPELLANT
C
P LETSOALO (THE CHIEF EXECUTICE OFFICER
OF
THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND)
SECOND
APPELLANT
THE
BOARD OF THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
THIRD APPELLANT
and
DUMISANI
ELVIS HLATSWAYO
FIRST RESPONDENT
MZWANDILE
MODCAY MASILELA
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE
GENERAL BAR COUNCIL OF SOUTH AFRICA
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
PRETORIA
SOCIETY OF ADVOCATES
FIFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
The Road Accident Fund and Others
v Hlatshwayo and Others
(724/2023 and 724B/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 17
(5 MARCH 2025)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, HUGHES and SMITH JJA and DOLAMO and MOLITSOANE AJJA
Heard:
11 November 2024
Delivered:
5
March 2025
Summary:
Civil procedure-whether it was competent for the full court to
inquire into the issue of costs occasioned by
the late settlement of
two Road Accident Fund matters – whether the full court erred
in ordering costs
de boniis propriis
against the Chief
Executive Officer of the Road Accident Fund (the CEO) and the Road
Accident Fund Board (the Board) pursuant to
the findings of the
inquiry – whether it was proper for the full court to order
costs
de boniis propriis
against the RAF Board where the Board
was not joined to the proceedings – whether costs were properly
granted against the
CEO and the Board in light of the indemnity
provision in
s 15(3)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
–
whether malice on the part of the CEO and the RAF board has been
established as required in terms of
s 15(3)
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Mpumalanga Division of the High Court, Mbombela
(Legodi JP and Mphahlele DJP and Mashile J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal against the first appellant is dismissed.
2
The appeal is upheld in respect of the second and third appellants.
3
The first appellant shall pay the first and second respondents’
costs of the appeal,
including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed.
4
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced by the
following order:
‘
The defendant is
ordered to pay the plaintiffs’ costs of suit, including the
costs of the inquiry and of two counsel in the
inquiry, where so
employed.’
JUDGMENT
Molitsoane AJA
(Mocumie, Hughes, Smith JJA and Dolamo AJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
At the heart of this
appeal is an order against the appellants to pay the costs occasioned
by the late settlement of the third-party
claims of Mr Dumisani Elvis
Hlatshwayo (the first respondent) and Mr Mzwandile Modcay Masilela
(the second respondent), as well
as the costs of the inquiry that the
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court held on the strength of rule
37A
of
the Uniform Rules of Court
.
[1]
The appellants unsuccessfully sought leave to appeal the order of the
full court which was specially constituted by the Judge President
of
the high court for the inquiry. The appeal is with special leave of
this Court.
[2]
The two cases of the first and second respondents, case numbers
3242/2019 and 7141/2019, were
consolidated by the high court
[2]
for the purposes of holding an inquiry into the costs which were
incurred as a result of the last-minute settlement of the two
claims.
The second appellant, the Chief Executive Officer of the Road
Accident Fund (the CEO), and the third appellant, the Board
of the
Road Accident Fund (the Board), were ordered to pay the costs in
their personal capacities. The CEO was also ordered to
bring the
judgment of the full court to the attention of the Minister of
Transport, as well as the Board, within the period stipulated
in the
order.
[3]
The first and second respondents opposed the appeal on the limited
basis that the Road Accident
Fund (the RAF) should be ordered to pay
the costs of the inquiry, which took place at the instance of the
full court. They, however,
did not support an order of costs
de
boniis propriis
against
the second and third appellants. The remaining cited respondents did
not participate in this appeal. The mere fact that
the appeal centres
solely on the issue of costs does not preclude this Court from
dealing with it.
[3]
In any
event, none of the respondents seek to impugn the jurisdiction of
this Court in this regard.
[4]
The RAF is a juristic person established in terms of s 2 of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56
of 1996 (the RAF Act). The CEO of the RAF
was appointed by the Minister of Transport on the recommendation of
the Board in terms
of s 12(1)
(a)
of the RAF Act. The
Board has been duly constituted in terms of s 10 of the RAF Act.
Section 4(1)
(b)
of the RAF Act provides that:
‘
[t]he
powers and functions of the Fund shall include the investigation and
settling, subject to this Act, of claims arising from
loss or damage
caused by the driving of a motor vehicle whether or not the identity
of the owner or the driver thereof, or the
identity of both the owner
and the driver thereof, has been established.’
The
first and second respondents are claimants as envisaged in s 17(1)
(a)
of the RAF Act.
Factual background
[5]
The following undisputed facts triggered these proceedings. The first
and second respondent instituted
separate delictual claims against
the RAF arising out of the alleged negligent driving of motor
vehicle
s
in separate incidents. A few days before
the dates of the hearing of both claims, the respondents and the RAF
settled the claims.
The claim of the first
respondent
[6]
On 28 March 2018, the RAF acknowledged receipt of a third-party claim
of the first respondent.
The RAF has no proof of any formal rejection
of the validity of the claim of the first respondent. On 10 September
2019, the first
respondent instituted an action against the RAF. It
appears that, after the close of the pleadings, the RAF was notified
of the
rule 37(1) conference and the rule 37A judicial case
management hearing, but it did not appear at these sittings. The
trial was
set down for hearing on 7 March 2022.
[7]
A day before the trial, the RAF made an offer to the first
respondent’s attorneys, which
offer was accepted on the day of
the trial. This settlement of the claim on the day of the trial
prompted the high court to hold
an inquiry into the issue of costs,
which is the subject of this appeal.
The claim of the
second respondent
[8]
The second respondent instituted a direct claim against the RAF which
was registered by the RAF
on 12 January 2018. Since the RAF did not
object to the validity of the claim as envisaged in s 24(5) of
the RAF Act, the
claim was deemed to be valid. On 27 March 2018, the
RAF requested the second respondent to submit his hospital/clinical
records.
The second respondent did not furnish the requested
documentation but opted to issue a summons instead. The RAF
instructed a firm
of attorneys to defend the matter. The pleadings
were duly exchanged but the hospital/clinical records were only
furnished in August
2019.
[9]
The second respondent’s attorneys then delivered the rule 37
conference and 37A judicial
case management meeting notices to the
RAF’s previous panel of attorneys. The RAF’s attorneys
failed to respond to
the rule 37 notice or appear at the case
management hearing. Although the second respondent claimed for loss
of earnings, his rule
37 minute, compiled by his attorneys, indicated
that the expert reports of the occupational therapist, the industrial
psychologist
and the actuary were still outstanding.
[10]
The RAF contends that when the second respondent set the matter down
for the case management meeting, the
case was not ripe for hearing as
there were expert reports outstanding. Nevertheless, this case was
certified trial ready on 25
January 2022 and was enrolled for hearing
on 14 March 2022.
[11]
The RAF tendered an offer in respect of the merits, future medical
expenses and general damages on 9 March
2022.The second respondent
accepted the offer on the same day. Due to the outstanding issue of
loss of earnings, the claim was
thus partially settled. The partial
settlement, like the settlement in the first respondent’s
claim, was also concluded a
day before the hearing.
[12]
The high court refused to make the settlement agreements orders of
the court. The late settlement of the
claims prompted the Judge
President to constitute a full court to inquire into the reasons for
the delay and late settlement of
the claims. In pursuance of its
decision to conduct the inquiry, the full court issued various
directives, which were primarily
aimed at the officials of the RAF.
[13]
Although the questions raised by the full court in the directives
were couched in general terms and not necessarily
fact specific, they
essentially sought to explore: (a) the reasons for the settlement or
partial settlement of claims close to
the date of trial;(b) the
failure of the RAF to hold meaningful pre-trial conferences and to
attend case management hearings;(c)
the failure of its officers to
attend court on the trial dates; the roles and duties of the claims
officers;(d) the reasons why
the officers of the RAF should not be
ordered to pay costs out of their own pockets;(e) how the RAF dealt
with the claims.
[14]
The full court also invited the Legal Practice Council (LPC) and the
General Council of the Bar of South
Africa (the GCB) to participate
as friends of the court. The GCB was also invited by the court to
collate information from other
divisions regarding the issues raised
by it. The Pretoria Society of Advocates also intervened in the
proceedings and filed a report.
[15] On
24 January 2023, the full court handed down judgment and granted the
following order:
‘
1.
The CEO (Mr. Letsoalo) and the Board are hereby directed to pay out
of their own pockets,
jointly and severally the one paying the other
to be absolved,
the
costs connected to and occasioned by the late settlement in each
matter.
(Emphasis
by the full court.)
2.
The costs referred to in paragraph 1 (above)
shall include the costs
to date connected to or associated with the enquiry proceedings
herein.
3.
The costs occasioned by or connected to the
late settlements herein
shall include costs of two counsels where applicable.
4.
The Chief Executive Officer of the Fund, Mr.
Letsoalo, is hereby
directed to bring this judgment to the attention of the Minister of
Transport and the Board by not later than
Thursday 26 January 2023,
and confirm to the Registrar of this court by not later than Friday
27 January 2023 that same has been
done.
. . . .
. . . .’
[16]
On 7 February 2023, acting in terms of rule 42
[4]
,
the full court varied its order to hold the RAF liable for the costs
of the first and second respondents, jointly and severally
with the
CEO and the Board. The full court’s judgment is comprehensive
comprising some 97 pages and traverses many issues.
In my view, it is
unnecessary to deal with all the issues considered by the full court
since the following issues are dispositive
of this appeal:(a) whether
it was appropriate for the Judge President to refer the first and
second respondents claims to the full
court for an inquiry; if so,
whether a case has been made for the orders granted;(b) the
non-joinder of the Board to the proceedings;(c)
whether costs should
have been granted against the CEO and the Board, in the light of
s 15(3) of the RAF Act. I consequently
only deal with these
issues.
Was it competent or
proper for the Judge President to refer the two fee inquiries to the
full court?
[17]
The high court has inherent powers to regulate its own processes by
virtue of s 173 of the Constitution.
[5]
In this regard, they, from time to time, promulgate practice
directives applicable to their divisions. In
Ex
parte National Director of Public Prosecutions
,
[6]
this Court explained that the practice directives, in essence, deal
with the day-to-day functioning of the courts and are geared
to
supplement the rules.
[7]
They
are, for this reason, not meant to substitute the rules. In case of
any conflict, the rules would prevail. However, they have
the same
force and effect as the rules.
[8]
[18]
The Chief Justice also published the Norms and Standards for the
Performance of Judicial Functions,
[9]
which, inter alia, seek to ‘ensure the effective, efficient and
expeditious adjudication and resolution of all disputes through
the
courts’.
[10]
To this
end, judicial officers are enjoined to take control of the management
of cases from an early stage and actively take responsibility
for the
speedy finalisation of cases from initiation until their conclusion.
[19]
Rule 37(9)
(a)
empowers a court to
consider, and in certain circumstances, to make special orders as to
costs against any party during the hearing
of an action or their
attorney, where the attorney had failed to attend the pre-trial
conference or to a material degree failed
to promote the effective
disposal of the action. It is not in dispute that the RAF’s
attorneys had failed to attend the rule
37 conferences as well as the
case management hearings having been duly notified. Rule 37A(1)
recognises the power of the Judge
President to issue practice notes
or directives dealing with judicial management of cases. In this
regard, the Judge President
of the high court promulgated such
practice directives to address, inter alia, the issue of the
settlement of disputes on the date
of the trial. Clause 14.1 of the
Practice Directive
[11]
precludes any settlement of the matter on the day of the trial. In
terms of the practice directives of the high court, where settlement
is concluded on the day of the trial, the court may inquire into
causes for the late settlement to determine which party should
be
saddled with costs, thereafter the case would be removed from the
roll.
[12]
[20] It
is important to note that while the responsibility for the management
of the case lies squarely in the
hands of a judge ceased with a
matter, rule 37A(2)
(c)
imposes the primary
responsibility on the litigants and their legal representatives to
prepare properly and comply with the rules
and to ensure that the
case is set down for hearing. At the case management hearing, the
court may make any order as to costs including
costs
de
boniis propriis
against
a party’s legal representatives or any person whose conduct has
contributed to frustrate the objectives of the case
management
directives.
[13]
If, during the
case management hearing, an inquiry into costs had not been held as
contemplated in rule 37A(12)(
h
),
the trial court may at its discretion, as in this case, hold an
inquiry into the issue of costs.
[14]
[21] In
the two matters before the full court, the parties had settled their
disputes and agreed who must pay
the costs. In awarding costs,
however, the court exercises a wide discretion which must be
judicially exercised. This discretion
is retained by the court even
in circumstances where the parties have reached an agreement on the
issue of costs. While the court
will recognise and respect the rights
of the parties to contract, it may interfere in the agreement on the
issue of costs, should
good cause exist.
[22] In
Intercontinental
Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles
,
[15]
this Court explained the essence of this discretion as follows:
‘
The
basic rule is that, statutory limitations apart, all costs awards are
in the discretion of the court. (Kruger Bros & Wasserman
v Ruskin
1918 AD 63
at 69, a decision which has consistently been followed).
The court’s discretion is a wide, unfettered and [an] equitable
one. It is a facet of the court’s control over the proceedings
before it. It is to be exercised judicially with due regard
to all
relevant considerations. These would include the nature of the
litigation being conducted before it and the conduct of the
parties
(or their representatives). A court may wish, in certain
circumstances, to deprive a party of costs, or a portion thereof,
or
order lesser costs than it might otherwise have done, as a mark of
its displeasure at such party’s conduct in relation
to the
litigation. Is it to be precluded by agreement from doings so? A
court should not be obliged to give its imprimatur to an
order of
costs which, in the circumstances, it considers entirely
inappropriate or undeserved. In my view, as a matter of policy
and
principle, a court should not, and must not, permit the ouster of its
discretion because of agreement between the parties with
regard to
costs.
Because a court exercises
its discretion judicially, not capriciously, it would normally be
bound to recognise the parties’
freedom to contract and to give
effect to any agreement reached in relation to costs. But good
grounds may exist, depending upon
the particular circumstances, for
following a different course. This might result, on a proper exercise
of discretion, in a party
being deprived of agreed costs, or being
awarded something less in the way of costs than that agreed upon.’
[23]
Over and above this, it was within the prerogative of the Judge
President, acting in terms of s 14(1)(
a
)
of the Superior Courts Act to constitute a full court.
[16]
The high court was entitled, in terms of its practice directives, the
empowering rule 37A(13) as well as the wide discretion it
has in the
award of costs, to hold this inquiry when the two cases were brought
before it for the purpose of making the settlement
agreements orders
of court. It was thus competent and proper for it, to refer the two
cases to the full court to inquire into the
question of wasted costs.
Was it proper for the
full court to order costs de boniis propriis against the RAF, the
Board and the CEO?
[24]
The full court dealt extensively with the connection between the
conduct of the CEO, the Board and the late
settlement of the two
claims. The full court further considered the contractual
relationship between the RAF and its panel of attorneys
which would
have terminated on 31 May 2020. In response to some of the questions
directed to him, the CEO penned a letter which
he claims was written
in his personal capacity. Contrary to established practice of
communicating with the court by notifying and
including all parties
involved in litigation, the CEO addressed the letter to the Judge
President without such notification. The
relevant parts of that
letter read as follows:
‘
1. What is the
nature of these proceedings before the full bench? Is it an enquiry
and, if it is, under what provision of the court
rules is it held?
What is intended to be achieved or determined in these proceedings?
2.
Except
for Hlatshwayo, Masilela and the RAF, who are parties to these
proceedings? What is the role of each party and how did they
join
these proceedings? How were these parties selected to join these
proceedings and invited to these proceedings? Are there any
examples
of proceedings of this nature held in the past, in any high court
division, that one can refer to, where this kind of
proceedings were
held?
3.What is my role,
personally in these proceedings? What is expected of me and how and
how do I participate in these proceedings?
I ask this question given
what happened, during these proceedings on 22 June 2022 when the
legal representative of the RAF, Advocate
Cedric Puckrin, SC,
informed the court of my presence and that I requested to address the
court on matters to my personal knowledge
and this was denied. An
instruction was then issued to the effect that I must instruct
Advocate Puckrin, who is the legal representative
of the RAF. This is
notwithstanding me being personally invited by the court to attend
the proceedings.
4. What is the procedure
in this kind of proceedings? I am asking, this in the context of
where RAF was asked to address the court
first and about 17 questions
were asked to be addressed, questions which were mostly generic and
did not form part of the papers.
I was also asked to present myself
personally at these proceedings, only for RAF legal representative,
Advocate Puckrin, to be
instructed to take instruction from me
without him being appointed my legal representative. I believe that I
have a right to a
legal representative of my choice. A right I don’t
intend to forgo.
5. Some of questions are
in relation to matters that are active various court cases and
proceedings, serving in divisions of the
high courts and the Supreme
Court of Appeal. This includes matters in reference to Section 13 of
the RAF Act, regarding RAF’s
Annual Report. How am I or any of
the parties expected to answer those questions? It is also not clear
how I and any of the parties
expected to answer the questions which
are the questions which are subject matters in the province of these
courts.
. . . .
7. Lastly, who usually
pays for costs associated with these kinds of proceedings.’
[25]
The Judge President declined to respond to the letter but dealt with
it extensively in the judgment. The
view taken by the Judge President
not to respond directly to the CEO is correct as the CEO as the
author of the letter was at the
time acting in his capacity as the
CEO of a party, the RAF, which was legally represented before the
pending proceedings in court.
The assertion by the CEO that the
letter was written in his personal capacity is perplexing and does
not bear scrutiny as he signed
same in his capacity as the CEO of the
RAF.
[26]
The letter is based on the CEO’s own misunderstanding of the
procedure the full court followed
in the cost inquiry. However,
the letter did little to avert the imminent disagreement between the
CEO and the full court which
found that neither the CEO, nor its
Board or Management had capacity to demand the files from panel
attorneys and deal with them
in cases which were still pending in
courts. Thus, the demand was, according to the full court,
unreasonable and unfair.
[27]
The full court found that there was a causal connection between the
demand to remove the files from the panel
attorneys and the delay in
the late settlement of the claims. It held that “. . . ‘it
was manifestly inappropriate’
of the CEO, the Board and the
Fund to demand the return of all the files from panel attorneys, when
the Fund did not have the capacity
to deal with such pending matters
in our courts.” The two cases were the subject of such
demands. The full court then,
inter alia, found that the appellants
were personally liable for the costs in respect of these two claims
and for the costs of
the inquiry.
[28] It
is settled law that those who occupy public office and who act in a
representative capacity may be mulcted
with costs out of their own
pockets in certain circumstances.
[17]
These costs orders,
de
boniis propriis,
are
not easily granted but only in exceptional circumstances.
[18]
In
Public
Protector
,
[19]
the Constitutional Court
stated it thus:
‘
In
Black
Sash II
,
this Court held that the common law rules regarding the granting of
personal costs orders are well grounded and buttressed by
the
Constitution. The traditional common law tests of bad faith and gross
negligence must be infused by the Constitution. Froneman
J said that
the question whether the conduct of a public official justifies the
imposition of liability for personal costs can
be answered by having
regard to institutional competence and constitutional obligations. He
went on to explain:
“
From an
institutional perspective, public officials occupying certain
positions would be expected to act in a certain manner because
of
their expertise and dedication to that position. Where specific
constitutional and statutory obligations exist the proper foundation
for personal costs orders may lie in the vindication of the
Constitution, but in most cases there will an overlap.”’
[20]
(Foot notes omitted)
Non joinder of the
Board
[29] In
dealing with the issue of personal costs against the CEO and the
Board, it is perhaps convenient to start
with the order against the
Board. The order of the full court was assailed on the basis that
there was a material non-joinder of
the Board. It is trite that
joinder of a party is required where such a party may have direct and
substantial interest in the subject
matter of the action. In
Snyders
and Others v De Jager
and
Others
[21]
the Constitutional Court held as follows:
‘
A person has a
direct and substantial interest in an order that is sought in
proceedings if the order would directly affect such
person’s
rights or interest. In that case the person should be joined in the
proceedings. If the person is not joined in
circumstances in which
his or her rights or interests will be prejudicially affected by the
ultimate judgment that may result from
the proceedings, then that
will mean that a judgment affecting that person’s rights or
interests has been given without affording
that person an opportunity
to be heard. That goes against one of the most fundamental principles
of our legal system. That is that,
as a general rule, no court may
make an order against anyone without giving that person the
opportunity to be heard.’
[22]
[30]
Neither the Board nor any of its members were before the full court.
The fact that the CEO ‘serves
at the pleasure of the . . .
Board,’ as held by the full court, is no justification to mulct
it with costs as it is common
cause that the Board was not part of
the proceedings from the time the inquiry commenced until it ended.
[31]
The full court issued numerous directives calling on different
functionaries of the RAF to provide explanatory
affidavits and in
some instances, calling for relevant people to appear before it in
person during these proceedings, but such
an invitation was never
extended to the Board. The full court was fully aware that the Board
and/or any of its members were not
before it, hence it also directed
the CEO to bring its judgment and order to the attention of the
Board. The full court ordered
personal costs orders against the
Board without affording it the opportunity to be heard. There is no
explanation or reasons advanced
in the judgment why the Board has
been mulcted with costs. Such an order goes against the notion of
procedural fairness and cannot
stand.
[32]
The full court found that the system which was implemented by the RAF
after the disposal of the panel attorneys
and the challenges thereof
appears to be the real problem for the ‘failure by the Fund to
participate effectively in the
pre-trial procedures and failure to
attend court on the dates of the trial’. The full court held
the following:
‘
I understand the
claim-officers who had deposed to affidavits in these two matters to
say in terms of the policy or directive issued
to them and to which
they are obliged to comply therewith, they are not permitted to ask
for information and seek to settle at
an earlier stage of the
pre-trial and judicial case management conferences. They are only
allowed to resort to seeking to settle
at a very late stage when
matters are enrolled for trial. This cannot be in the best interests
of justice to alleviate congested
trial rolls and to address the
problems which cause delays in the finalisation of cases as
contemplated in rule 37A(2)
(a)
.
In fact, this procedure to which the claim-officers are obliged to
comply with, fails to a material degree to promote the effective
disposal of the litigation as contemplated in rule 37(9)
(a)
(ii).
It is also a procedure that can be categorised as offending against
the principles and requirements of rule 37A, seen in the
context of
sub-rule 16 referred to earlier in this judgment. The procedure can
only serve to conduce unreasonably to frustrate
the objectives of the
judicial case management process as contemplated in sub-rule 12(h) of
rule 37A. . .’
[23]
[33]
What the full court had to decide, was the issue relating to the
costs pertaining to pre-trial conferences.
In
Road
Accident Fund v Taylor
,
[24]
this Court observed that:
‘
. . . [A] court
has no general duty or power to exercise oversight over the
expenditure of public funds. This is so for three reasons.
The first
is the constitutional principle of separation of powers. The second
is that the exercise of such a duty or power would
infringe the
constitutional rights of ordinary citizens to equality and to a fair
public hearing. The third principle that the
law constrains a court
to decide only issues that the parties have raised for decision. .
.’
[25]
When the court inquired
into the internal workings of the RAF as it did, it encroached into
the domain of the executive. The order
is fundamentally flawed and
should not be allowed to stand.
Whether the costs
should have been granted against the CEO and the Board in light of
s 15(3) of the RAF Act
[34]
The CEO and the Board’s liability for costs must be considered
in the light of the indemnity provided
in terms of s 15(3) of the RAF
Act. The CEO, the Board and any of its members enjoy indemnity in
terms of s 15(3) of the RAF Act.
This section provides that:
‘
No member of the
Board or officer or employee of the Fund, or other person performing
work for the Fund, shall be liable for anything
done in good faith in
the exercise of his or her powers or the performance of his or her
functions or duties under or in terms
of this Act.’
[35]
The contention by the appellants is that the full court did not
properly consider and apply the facts to
the issue of whether
‘malice’ can be imputed to them, and consequently,
whether s 15(3) found application. The full
court made findings on
issues that were not properly before it, in finding that the conduct
of the CEO, the Board and/or management
of the Fund put the Fund
‘under extreme pressure’ and that the said conduct was
taken in bad faith and found no protection
under s 15(3).
[36]
Section 15(3) envisages that the functionaries who act in bad faith
in the exercise of their powers or the
performance of their functions
or duties towards the RAF should be mulct with costs. In
Public
Protector
, the court had occasion to deal with the question of
‘bad faith’. In the minority judgment the court said the
following:
‘
A proper starting
point is in my view to remind ourselves of what the ordinary meaning
of bad faith is. A dictionary meaning is
“[i] intent to
deceive.” The meaning of bad faith or malicious intent is
generally accepted as extending to fraudulent,
dishonest or perverse
conduct; it is also known to extend to gross illegality. Here too the
perverse, seriously dishonest or malicious
conduct must link up, not
merely with the seniority of the person or high office occupied, but
also with the seriousness of the
actual or reasonably foreseeable
consequences of that conduct.
…
The correct approach to
determining the existence of bad faith is therefore one that
recognises that bad faith exists only when
the office-bearer acted
with the specific intent to deceive, harm or prejudice another person
or by proof of serious or gross recklessness
that reveals a breakdown
of the orderly exercise of authority so fundamental that absence of
good faith can be reasonably inferred
and bad faith presumed. This is
so because the mischief sought to be rooted out by rendering bad
faith so severely punishable,
particularly within the public sector
space, is to curb abuse of office which invariably has prejudicial
consequences for others.
Abuse of office undermines the efficacy of
State machinery and denies justice and fairness to all people and
institutions.’
[26]
[37] In
the context of this case, for the full court to make a finding of bad
faith, the issue of the demand for
the files from the panel attorneys
ought to have been an issue for adjudication before it. The
explanatory affidavits of the claims
handler
s
would
not have assisted the full court in this determination. That decision
was taken by the Board. The Board was not a party to
these
proceedings. The claims handlers do not serve on the Board. The CEO,
who might have provided insight into the decision of
the Board,
declined to be drawn into the issue of the panel attorneys as he held
the view that the said issue was subject to litigation
in other
forums. There was no evidence before the full court to arrive at the
finding of bad faith by the appellants, either based
on malicious
intent or even ‘gross recklessness that reveals a breakdown of
the ordinary exercise of authority.’ This
finding is
dispositive of the issue relating to the CEO and the Board’s
liability.
[38]
This brings us to the issue of whether the RAF should bear the costs
of the inquiry. As stated, the general
rule in cases of this nature
is that the award of costs lies within the discretion of the court.
An appellate court’s interference
with a court’s
discretion is permissible on restricted grounds only. In
Fine
v Society of Advocates of SA (Witwatersrand Division)
[27]
this Court held:
‘
The Appeal Court
will only interfere with the exercise of his discretion on the
grounds of material misdirection or irregularity,
or because the
decision is one no reasonable Court could make.’
[28]
[39] In
this appeal, there is no dispute that the RAF is liable for costs in
the litigation between itself and
the respondents. The respondents
did not contend for an award of personal costs against the second and
third appellants. However,
both respondents contend that the RAF
should be liable for the costs of the inquiry. The only issue thus
remaining is whether the
RAF should be mulcted with costs in respect
of the inquiry as envisaged in paragraph 14.5
[29]
read with clause 5 of Form A3
[30]
of the court a quo’s Practice Directives.
[40]
The full court imputed blame for the late settlement of the claims on
the RAF on two grounds. First, it found
that the system that was
implemented by the RAF after the termination of the panel of
attorneys’ mandate resulted in the
‘failure by the Fund
to participate effectively in the pre-trial procedures and failure to
attend court on the dates of the
trial’. Second, the high court
found that the problems experienced by the RAF ‘were actually
caused by lack of planning
at the time when the files were demanded
from the panel [of] attorneys.’
[41]
The full court, in scrutinising the conduct of the RAF after its
contracts with its panel of attorneys had
terminated, found that the
RAF did little to expedite the finalisation of the claims before
litigation. It is submitted on behalf
of the RAF and the Board that
the inquiry by the full court into the issue of the termination of
the agreement of the panel of
attorneys was designed to excoriate the
decisions which the Board took in 2020. These decisions culminated in
the cancellation
of the tender for a new panel of attorneys and the
request to the old panel of attorneys to hand over the files of the
RAF. The
decision of the RAF was successfully challenged in the
matter of
FourieFismer
Inc. and Two Others v Road Accident Fund
.
[31]
That was three years before the two claims were enrolled for hearing
in the Mpumalanga High Court. However, this Court, on appeal
in
RAF
v Mabunda Incorporated and Others: Minister of Transport v Road
Accident Fund and Others (Mabunda)
[32]
overturned
the judgment of the court of the first instance and ruled in favour
of the RAF.
[42] I
agree with the submission by counsel for the RAF that the decisions
in respect of the old panel of attorneys
and the evidence which led
to their undertaking, were not before the full court. It is
undesirable for courts to decide issues
which are not correctly
before them. The nature of the proceedings in our courts is that
parties bring particular issues or disputes
before the courts upon
which they ask for adjudication. It is thus generally not permissible
for the court to create, raise and
decide issues which the parties do
not wish to be adjudicated upon. In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
(
NDPP
v Zuma
)
,
[33]
this Court held, inter alia, that in ‘exercising [their]
judicial function judges are themselves constrained by the law’.
[34]
This Court further held that the judicial function of a judicial
officer is to confine the judgment to the issues before it; by
deciding matters that are germane and relevant; by not creating new
factual issues.
[35]
[43]
This rule of practice is, however, not cast in stone as the court
may, in certain circumstances
, mero motu
raise and decide
issues, usually legal in nature, even in circumstances where same
have not been raised on the papers before it.
These are issues such
as questions of jurisdiction,
locus standi
, condonation and
non-compliance with the court rules. The override to this trite
principle is that the parties must have been alerted
that the issues
will be raised, and they must have been granted the opportunity to
address the court on them, which are to be included
same in their
heads of argument in preparation of their case. This evidently did
not happen.
[44]
The full court found that the problems at the RAF ‘w[ere]
actually caused by lack of planning at the
time when the files were
demanded from the panel attorneys’. The full court dismissed
any intimation by the counsel of the
RAF and the Board on the issue
of budgetary and lack of funding constraints. This issue was
correctly rejected as the CEO did not
raise it as a defence for
failure by the RAF to attend pre-trial conferences. It is, however,
not in dispute that the RAF has been
in financial woes for the
longest of time.
[45] This Court in
Mabunda
,
commenting on the fact that the RAF had been technically insolvent,
said that ‘the repeated deficits have seemingly been
exacerbated by the mounting legal fees which the RAF has been obliged
to meet; both those of the attorneys on the panel and those
of
attorneys and counsel representing claimants.’
[36]
The CEO painted a picture by the Board, of attempting to re-evaluate
existing processes and implementation of more efficient and
effective
approaches. In this regard, the RAF has implemented three
departments, namely, the settlement hub department, the short-term
trial department and the long-term trial department. It appears that
at the core of this reorganisation is the need to encourage
efficiency through teamwork. It is hoped that plans like these will
bear fruit shortly and the settlement of claims will happen
in
shorter periods, thus reducing costs and benefit claimants for whom
the scheme is meant.
[46]
The inquiry into costs was not initiated by any of the parties. While
it is trite that a court is empowered
to order such an inquiry
mero
motu,
it must be borne in mind that the purpose of judicial case
flow management is essentially to curb unnecessary delays in
litigation,
by inter alia, narrowing the issues and facilitating the
settlement of disputes. It is also meant to reduce the costs of
litigation.
[47]
The inquiry at the behest of the full court went against the grain of
avoiding delays and curbing the costs
of litigation. The costs, in
the uncomplicated claims of the respondents which had been settled,
resulted in extensive and unnecessary
costly investigation into
systemic problems caused by the decision taken years before the
claims were instituted. The matters were
settled around March 2022.
Both matters were enrolled for hearing during the same month. It was
in March 2022 when the high court
sent out directives which were
directed to the officials of the RAF about the issue of costs. The
whole exercise lasted for about
nine months, with no less than ten
counsel involved. It defeated the very purpose of avoiding delays in
litigating and cutting
costs.
[48] In
the case of the second respondent the pre-trial minute filed by his
attorneys five days before the trial,
states that the reports of
three experts were outstanding. An assertion is made in the minute
that ‘plaintiff will request
an offer on the issue of [p]ast
[l]oss of [e]arnings and [f]uture [l]oss of [e]arnings upon receipt
of outstanding expert’s
reports.’ On this basis, one can
safely conclude, as contended by the RAF, that when the case was
certified trial-ready and
enrolled, it was not ripe for hearing. The
full court does not refer to the fact that the case was pre-maturely
set down for hearing
by the second respondent’s attorneys or
even still, on the possible instructions of the second respondent.
[49] I
am acutely aware that the inquiry was not brought about at the
request of the RAF. With this in mind, however,
it failed to validate
the claims as required by s 24(5) of the RAF Act. It also failed to
attend the rule 37 and judicial case
management hearings which
ultimately caused the high court to hold the inquiry into costs. It
was to blame for the holding of the
inquiry. The case management
procedures including hearings relating to costs, necessarily form
part and parcel of litigation. It
is thus in the interests of justice
that the RAF be held liable for the costs of the inquiry as the first
and second respondents
were not responsible in
anyway.
[50]
I accordingly make the following order:
1
The appeal against the first appellant is dismissed.
2
The appeal is upheld in respect of the second and third appellants.
3
The first appellant shall pay the first and second respondents’
costs of the appeal,
including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed.
4
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced by the
following order:
‘
The defendant is
ordered to pay the plaintiffs’ costs of suit, including the
costs of the inquiry and of two counsel in the
inquiry, where so
employed.’
P
E MOLITSOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the first and
third appellants:
C
Puckrin SC with R Schoeman and P Nyapholi
Instructed
by:
Mpoyana
Ledwaba Inc, Pretoria
Modisenyane
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the second
appellant:
J G Cilliers SC
with M T Shepherd and H A
Mukhavela
Instructed by:
Mpoyana Ledwaba,
Pretoria
Modisenyana Ledwaba
Inc. Pretoria
For the first
respondent:
B P Geach SC with A
Frosch and F H H Kerrhahn
Instructed by:
Pieter Nel
Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the second
respondent:
P J Vermeulen SC
with M Pienaar
Instructed by:
P Mahlalela
Attorneys, Pretoria
Hill McHardy &
Herbst Inc.
[1]
Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959 - Rule 37A of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides
for judicial case management which includes settlement of all or
some of the issues.
[2]
For
ease of reference, ‘the high court’ in these proceedings
refers to proceedings before a single judge, while ‘the
full
court’ refers to the proceedings before a specially
constituted court of three judges.
[3]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[2019]
ZACC 29
;
2019 (9) BCLR 1113
(CC);
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) (
Public
Protector
).
[4]
Rule
42 provides:
Variation and rescission
of orders
(1) The court may, in
addition to any other powers it may have,
mero motu
or upon
the application of any party affected, rescind or vary:
(a) An order or judgment
erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any
party affected thereby;
(a) an order or judgment
in which there exists an ambiguity, or a patent error or omission,
but only to the extent of such ambiguity,
error or omission.
(c) …
2…
3…
[5]
Section
173 provides that ‘[t]he Constitutional Court, the Supreme
Court of Appeal and the High Court of South Africa each
has the
inherent power to protect and regulate their own process, and to
develop the common law, taking into account the interests
of
justice’.
[6]
Ex parte National
Director of Public Prosecutions
[2018]
ZASCA 86
; 2018 (2) SACR (SCA) 176.
[7]
Ibid
para 31.
[8]
Rossiter
v Nedbank Ltd
2015
JDR 2629 (SCA);
[2015]
ZASCA 196
para 15.
[9]
The
Chief Justice issued the
Norms
and Standards for the Performance of Judicial Functions (Norms and
Standards)
in
terms of
s 8
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
read with
s 165(5) of the Constitution and published in GN 147 in GG
37390 of 28 February 2014.
[10]
See
para 2 of the Norms and Standards.
[11]
Amended
Practice Directive of 9 January 2020 for Mpumalanga Division of the
High Court issued in terms of
s 8(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act
read
with
rule 37A(1)
and (2) of Uniform Rules of Court.
[12]
Clause
14.4
provides that ‘[a]ny matter that is settled on the date of the
trial in its entirety, shall be removed from the trial
roll . . .’
Clause 14.5 provides that ‘[t]he recording of removal from the
roll as contemplated in 14.4 above shall
be preceded by summary
inquiry and an order for costs as contemplated in paragraphs 4 and 5
of Form A3 . . . and any defaulting
party or legal practitioner may
be ordered to pay costs on a party and party scale or punitive scale
and or out of own pocket,
including forfeiture of appearance or day
fee, all of which shall be guided by the nature of the default and
explanation provided
for settlement on the day of the trial’.
[13]
See
rule 37A(12)
(h)
.
[14]
Rule
37A(13) provides that ‘[t]he record of the case management
conference, including the minutes submitted by the parties
to the
case management judge, any directions issued by the judge and the
judge’s record of the issues to be tried in the
action, but
excluding any settlement discussions and others, shall be included
in the court file to be placed before the trial
judge’.
[15]
Intercontinental
Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles
1999
(2) SA 1045
(SCA);
[1999] 2 All SA 304
(A) paras 25-26.
[16]
Section14(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides: ‘Save as
provided in this Act or any other law, a court of a Division must be
constituted before a single judge
when sitting as a court of first
instance for the hearing of any civil matter, but the Judge
President and the Deputy Judge President,
the senior available
judge, may at any time direct that the matter may be heard by a
court of not more than three judges as he
or she may determine.’
[17]
Black
Sash Trust v Minister of Social Development and Others (Freedom
Under Law NPC Intervening)
[2018]
ZACC 36
;
2018 (12) BCLR 1472
(CC) paras 7-14. See also
Public
Protector
para
153.
[18]
Lushaba
v MEC for Health, Gauteng
2015
(3) SA 616
(GJ) paras 68 and 69.
[19]
See
fn 2.
[20]
See
fn 2
para
154.
[21]
Snyders and Others v
De Jager and Others
[2016]
ZACC 54
;
2017 (5) BCLR 606
(CC).
[22]
Ibid
para 9.
[23]
Hlatshwayo
and Another v Road Accident Fund
[2023]
ZAMPMBHC 2 para 56.
[24]
Road Accident Fund v
Taylor
[2023]
ZASCA 64
;
2023(5) SA 147(SCA).
[25]
Ibid
para 31.
[26]
See fn 2 paras 71-72.
[27]
Fine v Society of
Advocates of SA (Witwatersrand Division)
1983
(3) SA 488(A)
[28]
Ibid
at 494H-495.
[29]
The
recording of removal from the roll as contemplated in 14.4 above
shall be preceded by summary inquiry and an order for costs
as
contemplated in paragraphs 4 and 5 of Form A3 or paragraph 3.6 of
Form B or any other similar Form and any defaulting party
or
attorney may be ordered to pay costs on a punitive scale and or out
of own pocket, including forfeiture of appearance or day
fee
,
all of which shall be guided by the nature of the default and
explanation provided for settlement on the date of trial. (Emphasis
in the text)
[30]
Clause
5 of Form A3 provides:
It
is hereby recorded that should this matter be settled on the date of
trial, parties run the risk of punitive cost order and/or
forfeiture
of a day fee, against any person responsible for the late settlement
of the matter and any such costs order may include
payment out of
pocket by whoever is responsible for the late settlement including
claim handlers and or attorneys of parties.
9 Emphasis in the text).
[31]
Fourie
Fismer Inc. and Two Others v Road Accident Fund
[2020]
ZAGPPHC
183; [2020] 3 All SA 460 (GP);
2020 (5) SA 465 (GP).
[32]
RAF
and Others v Mabunda Incorporated and Others; Minister of Transport
v Road Accident Fund and Others
[2022]
ZASCA 169; [2023] 1 All SA 595 (SCA).
[33]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA);
2009 (1) SACR 361
(SCA);
2009 (4)
BCLR 393
(SCA); [2009] 2 All 243 (SCA).
[34]
Ibid
para
15.
[35]
Ibid
para 15.
[36]
Ibid
para
27.
sino noindex
make_database footer start