Case Law[2025] ZASCA 21South Africa
Tosholo v Road Accident Fund (875/2023) [2025] ZASCA 21 (19 March 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 March 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – special plea of prior settlement – compromised claim – settlement agreement neither challenged nor rectified – Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 – appeal dismissed.
Judgment
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## Tosholo v Road Accident Fund (875/2023) [2025] ZASCA 21 (19 March 2025)
Tosholo v Road Accident Fund (875/2023) [2025] ZASCA 21 (19 March 2025)
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sino date 19 March 2025
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 875/2023
In the matter between:
PHOZISA
TOSHOLO
APPELLANT
and
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Tosholo v Road
Accident Fund
(875/2023)
[2025] ZASCA
21
(19 March 2025)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MABINDLA-BOQWANA, MOLEFE and KEIGHTLEY
JJA and GORVEN AJA
Heard:
20 November 2024
Delivered:
19 March 2025
Summary:
Civil Procedure – special plea of prior
settlement – compromised claim – settlement agreement
neither challenged
nor rectified –
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of
1996
– appeal dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Wathen-Falken AJ, sitting as court of
first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Molefe JA (Mocumie,
Mabindla-Boqwana and Keightley JJA and Gorven AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and
order of the Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the
high court). The
crisp issue in this appeal is whether the high court
was correct in upholding either or both of the two special pleas of
prior
settlement and prescription. The matter is before this Court
with leave of the high court.
[2]
On 9 July 2012, the appellant, Ms Phozisa
Tosholo, was a passenger in a motor vehicle which was involved in an
accident. She sustained
injuries from the accident. Whilst a patient
at Tygerberg Hospital, she was approached by an agent of the
respondent, the Road
Accident Fund (the RAF), who advised her to go
to the RAF offices in the hospital regarding a claim for her
injuries.
[3]
The appellant subsequently lodged a claim
for damages at those RAF offices. The RAF directly negotiated a
settlement with her (the
direct claim). On 18 November 2013, the
appellant signed an offer of settlement of her claim in terms of
which she was paid
about R17 000. In her particulars of claim, she
alleged that she was under the impression that the settlement agreed
to related
only to her past loss of earnings. She expected to be
contacted by the RAF regarding further payment for her pain and
suffering
and future loss of earnings.
[4]
Subsequent to receiving the settlement
amount, the appellant consulted a firm of attorneys, Kruger and
Company. On 4 June 2014,
the appellant’s attorneys lodged a
claim for compensation on her behalf with the RAF. In a letter dated
30 June 2014,
the RAF informed the appellant’s attorneys
that a claim had already been lodged, and that the RAF could not
register another
claim for the appellant. The appellant’s
attorneys were advised to contact the RAF Direct Claims Department to
‘clarify
and confirm the mandate of this claim’ and to
‘furnish . . . written confirmation in this regard by the
claimant’.
This was not done.
[5]
On 29 August 2014, the appellant’s
attorneys issued summons against the RAF for general damages, past
and future loss of earnings
and past and future medical expenses. The
RAF pleaded to the summons without any mention of the direct claim.
The appellant, at
the behest of both her attorneys and the RAF, was
examined by several medical practitioners who furnished medico-legal
reports.
By early 2017, all these reports and associated joint
minutes were in place.
[6]
On 30 June 2017, the RAF’s attorneys
informed the appellant’s attorneys that they would provide them
with a ‘settlement
offer in respect of all heads of damages’
once instructions were received. On 25 August 2017, Ms Waseema
Kumandan, a claims
handler at the RAF, informed the appellant’s
attorneys in an email that the appellant had claimed with the Direct
Claims
Department, and that according to the RAF’s records, the
appellant’s claim had been settled. She said they ‘recommended
that the file be [reopened] and a new offer be made based on the
medico-legal reports’.
[7]
When no offer was forthcoming, the
appellant’s attorneys launched an interim payment application
in terms of rule 34A of the
Uniform Rules of Court. The application
was opposed by the RAF on the basis that the claim was a duplicate of
the direct claim
which had already been settled fully and finally.
The appellant then withdrew the application and the summons dated 29
August 2014.
She instituted the present action by issuing summons on
17 January 2018, based on what was described as an under-settlement
of
her original claim. The appellant claimed that the RAF had agreed
to represent, advise or assist her in that claim and that it had
assumed a duty of care to do so. It had failed to exercise its legal
duty of care, resulting in her receiving inadequate compensation
for
her injuries.
[8]
In consequence, the RAF filed a plea and
five special pleas, two of which were adjudicated by the high court.
These are the subjects
of this appeal. The first special plea states
that there was a full and final settlement of the appellant’s
claim on 18 November
2013. The second special plea is that of
prescription.
[9]
The high court upheld the special plea in
respect of the appellant’s claim being compromised and settled.
It found that the
summons was issued and served well out of time and
consequently the special plea of prescription was also upheld. The
appellant
seeks an order setting aside the high court order.
The Law
[10]
The
issue in this Court is whether the appellant’s claim was
compromised and settled. A compromise is founded on the prescribed
principles of offer and acceptance, and involves each party making a
concession, either by reducing their purported claim or by
acknowledging their liability.
[1]
It is important to ensure that there is a clear offer to compromise,
and a transparent acceptance of the settlement offer when
a claim is
settled, and a compromise is attained.
[2]
Therefore, the language of an offer to compromise in order to resolve
a conflict must be precise and definite.
[11]
If
the compensation made by the debtor is considered an offer of
compromise (
animo
contrahendi
),
which the creditor agrees to, the creditor usually loses the right to
pursue the debtor further.
[3]
Accepting an offer of compromise without reservation or restrictions
to the debtor’s offer of compromise is typically understood
to
be done with the implicit, if not explicit, stipulation that the
creditor abandons any right to pursue the remainder of their
claim.
[12]
The
legal position on how a court should deal with a settlement agreement
was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Mafisa
v Road Accident Fund and Another
(
Mafisa
),
[4]
where it was stated that ‘[c]ontractual agreements concluded
freely and voluntarily by the parties ought to be respected
and
enforced. This is in accordance with the established principle
pacta
sunt servanda
(agreements must be honoured)’.
[5]
The Court further held that, as a general rule, a judge should not
interfere with the terms of a settlement agreement.
[6]
This Court found that a compromise puts an end to the
lis
between
the parties and has the effect of
res judicata
.
Courts must therefore exercise restraint to ensure that there is no
undue imposition on the parties’ contractual freedom.
[7]
[13]
In
Burt
N O v National Bank of South Africa
,
[8]
this Court held that:
‘
The
tender is made for the purpose of settling the action, and neither
the person who makes the offer nor the person who accepts
it can
possibly have any misconception as to its meaning. If, therefore, a
plaintiff unreservedly accepts an offer made in
those terms, he
must be taken to accept it, with the condition attached that he shall
abandon the balance of his claim, and in
these circumstances it is,
to my mind, inconceivable that he can retain the money and at the
same time be allowed to sue for the
balance of the claim.’
[14]
An
agreement of compromise therefore has the effect of discharging the
existing obligations of the debtor and the creditor’s
claim
will be regarded as finally adjudicated upon (
res
judicata
).
[9]
Compromise is a settlement of disputed obligations by agreement. Any
litigation following the settlement will relate to non-compliance
with the settlement agreement and not the original dispute.
[15]
When the legal principles set forth are
applied to the facts in this matter, a clear picture emerges. The
‘offer and acceptance
of settlement’ prepared by the RAF,
dated 25 September 2013, and signed by the appellant on 18 November
2013, clearly indicated
that the settlement was in full and final
settlement of the appellant’s claim. It also confirmed that the
RAF was discharged
from all liability pertaining to the loss suffered
in the accident.
[16]
In addition, the appellant warranted as
follows:
‘
I
understand the meaning and extent of this Offer and Acceptance Notice
and confirm that it records the full and final agreement
between the
RAF and me. The RAF is discharged from all liability pertaining to
the loss suffered in the above mentioned accident.’
[17]
This was a written contract. There was no
basis on the pleadings or evidence to impugn it. Nor could evidence
be led to contradict
its terms. Nor was it pleaded that the agreement
was subject to rectification. It is clear that the agreement of
compromise was
binding on the appellant. That means that no
lis
between the parties remained.
[18]
On a conspectus of all the evidence, the
high court cannot be faulted for its finding that the appellant’s
claim had been
compromised and no
lis
against the RAF existed or could be pursued. Consequently, the appeal
stands to be dismissed. Since this is dispositive of the
appeal, it
is unnecessary to consider the second special plea of prescription.
[19]
The path this litigation has taken is
unfortunate. It should have been avoided by both the legal
practitioner of the appellant and
the RAF, as the latter encouraged
the appellant to submit her claims directly with the RAF. Both the
RAF and the appellant’s
attorney should have appreciated that a
lay litigant such as the appellant may not be acquainted with the
legal intricacies of
personal damages claims.
[20]
The conduct of the RAF in delaying with
this matter is not free from criticism. It unnecessarily prolonged
the matter after summons
was issued. Later, on 29 August 2017,
the RAF seemed to admit that the appellant’s direct claim had
been grossly under-settled,
based on the medico-legal reports
subsequently obtained. It was only when the appellant’s
attorneys launched an application
for an interim payment, and in
opposition to that application, that the RAF asserted that the
appellant’s claim had been
finally settled as a direct claim.
The high court correctly found that the RAF’s erstwhile
attorney’s conduct in dealing
with the matter did not impress.
[21]
On the other hand, the appellant’s
attorneys were informed on 30 June 2014 that a claim had already been
lodged and that the
RAF could not register another claim for the
appellant. They were advised to contact the RAF Direct Claims
Department to ‘clarify
and confirm the mandate of this claim’
and to ‘furnish . . . written confirmation in this regard by
the claimant’.
They declined to do so and issued summons
despite not clarifying the position. All of the legal costs in this
matter could have
been avoided had they done so.
[22]
In all the circumstances of this case, the
best course to follow is to make no order as to costs. Due to the
manner in which the
appellant’s attorneys handled her claim, it
may well be inappropriate for them to seek any fees from her.
[23]
In the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed
with no order as to costs.
D S MOLEFE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
K Engers
SC
Instructed
by:
Kruger & Co Attorneys, Cape Town
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent:
A Montzinger
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Cape Town
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
R H
Christie,
The Law of Contract in South Africa (2022) 8
th
edition at 557.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Be Bop
A Lula Manufacturing & Printing CC v Kingtex Marketing (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZAWCHC 72
;
2006 (6) SA 379
(C) at 392H-J
.
[4]
Mafisa
v Road Accident Fund and Another
[2024]
ZACC 4
;
2024 (4) SA 426
(CC), 2024 (6) BCLR (CC)
805.
[5]
Ibid para 36.
[6]
Ibid para 50.
[7]
Road
Accident Fund v Taylor and Other Matters
[2023]
ZASCA 64
;
2023 (5) SA 147
(SCA) paras 37-42 and 51
.
[8]
Burt
N O v National Bank of South Africa
1921
AD 59
at 67.
[9]
The
principle is that, generally, parties may not again litigate on the
same matter once it has been determined on the merits.
sino noindex
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