Case Law[2023] ZASCA 11South Africa
Member of the Executive Council, Education, North West Province v Foster and Others (471/2021) [2023] ZASCA 11 (13 February 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – negligence – whether public school hosting a sports tournament took reasonable steps to ensure the presence of competent and suitably equipped first aid provider.
Judgment
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## Member of the Executive Council, Education, North West Province v Foster and Others (471/2021) [2023] ZASCA 11 (13 February 2023)
Member of the Executive Council, Education, North West Province v Foster and Others (471/2021) [2023] ZASCA 11 (13 February 2023)
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sino date 13 February 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
No: 471/2021
In
the matter between:
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL,
EDUCATION,
NORTH WEST PROVINCE
APPELLANT
and
IZAK
BOSHOFF FOSTER
FIRST RESPONDENT
GUILLAUME
HENRI BOSHOFF FOSTER
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE
LEOPARDS RUGBY UNION
THIRD RESPONDENT
KOSH
SPORT & TRAUMA SERVICES
FOURTH RESPONDENT
And
THE
LEOPARDS RUGBY UNION
FIRST THIRD PARTY
KOSH
SPORT & TRAUMA SERVICES
SECOND THIRD PARTY
Neutral
citation:
The
Member of the Executive Council, Education, North West Province v
Izak Boshoff Foster & Others
(Case
no 471/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 11
(February 2023)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, MOCUMIE and CARELSE JJA and GOOSEN
and MASIPA AJJA
Heard:
9 November 2022
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 11h00 on 13 February
2023.
Summary:
Delict – negligence – whether public school hosting a
sports tournament took reasonable steps to ensure the presence
of
competent and suitably equipped first aid provider.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Thobane AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
1 The appeal succeeds
only to the extent set out in para 2 below.
2 Paragraph 2 of the
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
first defendant is directed to pay the first plaintiff’s costs,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel.’
3
The appellant is
directed to pay the costs of the appeal, including the costs of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Mocumie
JA (Van der Merwe, Carelse JJA et Goosen AJA concurring):
[1]
Rugby (the sport code at the core of this appeal is defined in the
Concise
Oxford English Dictionary
(12
ed) as ‘a team game played with an oval ball that may be
kicked, carried, and passed by hand, in which points are won
by
scoring a try or by kicking the ball over the crossbar of the
opponents’ goal’.
[1]
[2]
Despite it being a much-loved national sport in South Africa and
played all over the
world, because it involves physical contact,
rugby is a dangerous sport in which players often sustain serious
injuries; which
may include permanent paralysis. Because of all the
attendant risks, there has for many years been insistence on
emergency measures,
including professional first aid services, being
available at rugby matches. One would therefore not expect a player
to be injured
by the paramedics and/or people who are meant to attend
to their injuries in an emergency, as it happened in this case.
[2]
[3]
The facts of this matter are briefly as follows. On 6 May 2006, the
first respondent
(who was 18 years of age at the time and in matric)
played in a rugby tournament representing his school, Hoërskool
Lichtenburg
(herein after referred to as Lichtenburg) against Hoër
Volkskool Potchefstroom (herein after referred to as Volkskool). The
latter hosted the tournament. Both schools fall under the appellant,
the Member of the Executive Council of Education: North West
province
(the MEC). The first respondent was tackled by a player from the
opposing team and fell to the ground. Whilst on the ground
another
player fell on top of him. He sustained an injury to his neck as a
result of the impact. Two first aid personnel carried
him off the
field without stabilising his neck with a spine board or solid neck
brace. This caused the second injury to the first
respondent. This
matter revolves around the second injury. He was later taken by
ambulance to Potchefstroom Medi-Clinic, where
he received treatment.
Thereafter, he was airlifted to Pretoria Hospital, where he underwent
surgery twice. After the first operation,
the doctors informed the
first respondent that he would not be able to walk again. This
remained the position despite the second
operation. He was discharged
on 15 September 2006, four months after the incident.
[4]
Following this tragic incident, the first respondent and his father,
the second respondent,
issued summons in the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (the high court) in respect of the second
injury, which was
caused by the manner in which the first aid
personnel carried the first respondent off the field without having
stabilised his
neck. The MEC was the first defendant in the high
court whilst the first and second respondents (the respondents) were
the first
and second plaintiffs. The third and fourth respondents
were respectively the third and fourth defendants as well as the
first
and second third parties.
[3]
The
third respondent settled the claim with the respondents. The fourth
respondent, Kosh Sport & Trauma Services, did not participate
in
the proceedings. By agreement between the parties the high court had
to determine the issue of liability as formulated by the
parties:
‘whether the first defendant is liable for the damages
suffered, and if so to what specific extent and for what
specific
injuries. . . ’.
[5]
After proceeding to trial, the high court
(per
Thobane AJ), granted the following order:
‘
1.
The
defendants
are
liable for 100% of proven or agreed damages suffered by the first
plaintiff as a result of the manner in which first plaintiff
was
carried off the field on 6 May 2006;
2. The
defendants
are
directed to pay the plaintiffs’ costs on a punitive scale as
between attorney and client which costs shall include:
2.(1) Costs of procuring
medico-legal reports, consultations, attending meetings and procuring
joint minutes;
2.(2) Costs of all expert
witnesses called by the plaintiffs;
2.(3) All costs of the
action including costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.’ (Emphasis added.)
The effect of the order
was that the second respondent’s claim was dismissed.
[6]
Thobane AJ was not available to hear the application for leave to
appeal. The respondents
also sought a variation of Thobane AJ’s
order. Because of the unavailability of Thobane AJ, Potterill ADJP
heard the application
for leave to appeal together with the
application for variation. She partly granted the variation sought,
but refused leave to
appeal. This Court subsequently granted leave to
the appellant to appeal to this Court.
Issues for
determination
[7]
The central issue for determination is whether the MEC was liable for
the second injury
that the first respondent suffered on 6 May 2010 at
the rugby match held at Volkskool. A secondary issue is whether
Potterill ADJP
was empowered to vary the order. For convenience, I
commence with the secondary issue to dispose of it.
The variation order
[8]
The respondents sought to vary the order in three respects. First,
that the phrase
‘the defendants are liable’ in para 1 and
‘the defendants are directed to pay’ in para 2 be
corrected to
read ‘the first defendant’. Secondly, that
para 1 of the order be amended to also make reference to the ‘second
plaintiff’’ and thirdly that the injury for which the
appellant is liable be described as envisaged in the separation
order. As I shall show, the first and third proposed variations were
granted. The second was refused and nothing further needs
to be said
about it.
[9]
Potterill ADJP made an order on the variation application as follows:
‘
Prayer
2 of the application is thus not granted.
Accordingly, paragraphs
[54]1 and [54]2 are varied to read as follows:
54.1 The first defendant
is liable for 100% of proven or agreed damages suffered by the first
plaintiff as a result of the manner
in which first plaintiff was
carried off the field on 6 May 2006, which aggravated an existing
cervical spine injury with neurological
fall out at C7, to become an
effective C5 motor deficit.
[54]2 The first defendant
is directed to pay the plaintiffs’ costs on a punitive scale as
between attorney and client, which
costs shall include:
2.(1) Costs of procuring
medico-legal reports, consultations, attending meetings and procuring
joint minutes.
2.(2) Costs of all expert
witnesses called by the plaintiffs.
2.(3) All costs of the
action including costs consequent upon the employment of two counsel.
No order as to costs in
this application.’
[10]
Rule 42 of the Uniform Court Rules of Court provides:
‘
(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:
. . .
(b)
An order or judgment in which there is an
ambiguity, or patent error or omission
,
but only to the extent of the ambiguity, error or omission.’
(Emphasis added.)
[11]
The Constitutional Court in
Minister
of Justice v Ntuli,
[4]
with
reference to the seminal judgment of
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) v Genticuro AG,
[5]
stated
the following on whether a court may vary, correct or amend its own
order:
‘
The
general principles of the common law applicable to the variation of
orders of Court were summarised by Trollip JA in
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
as
follows:
“
The
general principle, now well established in our law, is that, once a
court has duly pronounced a final judgment or order, it
has itself no
authority to correct, alter, or supplement it. The reason is that it
thereupon becomes
functus
officio
:
its jurisdiction in the case having been fully and finally exercised,
its authority over the subject matter has ceased.”
Certain exceptions to
this general principle have been recognised and are referred to in
Firestone
. They are [i] variations in a judgment or order
which are necessary to explain ambiguities, to correct errors of
expression, [ii]
to deal with accessory or consequential matters
which were “overlooked or inadvertently omitted”, and
[iii] to correct
orders for costs made without having heard argument
thereon.
Trollip JA was prepared
to assume in the
Firestone case
that the list of exceptions
might not be exhaustive and that a Court might have a discretionary
power to vary its orders in other
appropriate cases. He stressed,
however, that the
“
.
. .assumed discretionary power is obviously one that should be very
sparingly exercised, for public policy demands that the principle
of
finality in litigation should generally be preserved rather than
eroded . . .”.’
[12]
The high court was fully aware that in terms of the separation order,
only the liability of the
MEC was in issue. That is how the trial was
conducted. And the high court determined that issue. The references
in its order to
‘the defendants’ were therefore clearly
patent errors that resulted in the order not giving effect to the
high court’s
true intention. It is trite that such errors may
be corrected in terms of exception (ii) in
Firestone
.
According to exception (iii), a court may ‘correct a clerical,
arithmetical or other error in it judgment or order so as
to give
effect to its true intention . . .’.
[6]
[13]
Paragraph 1 of the order is ambiguous having regard to what the high
court was called upon to
decide in terms of the order it granted on
the separation of issues under rule 33(4). It required the court to
be specific on the
description of the injuries. It clearly made the
required finding but failed to reflect it in the order. This was an
ambiguity,
which could be corrected without changing the ‘sense
and substance’ of the judgment or order. Thus, the addition of
the words, ‘
which
aggravated an existing cervical spine injury with neurological
fallout at C7, to become an effective C5 motor deficit. . .’
was in
line with exception (ii) in
Firestone.
[7]
[14]
On this basis, it is clear that Potterill ADJP acted within the
powers vested in her. The variation
of the order she granted was
justified. The MEC fails on this secondary issue.
[15]
As I have said, the first respondent suffered a neck injury after a
player fell on top of him
whilst on the ground after he was tackled
by a player from the opposing team a few minutes before. He was
carried off the rugby
field, against his protestation, by two first
aid personnel, without stabilising his neck with a spine board or
neck brace. It
is undisputed that this caused the first respondent’s
second injury. This is clear from the evidence of the two medical
experts,
Dr Edeling (for the MEC) and Dr Gianluca Marus (for the
first respondent), who compiled their respective reports and
thereafter
a joint minute.
[16]
From the outset, the experts agreed that the first respondent had
sustained an initial and second
injury. The initial injury consisted
of a dislocated fracture of the cervical spine at the C4/C5 level,
with partial severing of
the spinal cord that resulted in
neurological fallout at C7. The second injury to the spinal cord
resulted in full and permanent
neurological fallout at C5. Although
the two experts were initially not agreed on the cause of the second
injury, they subsequently
filed a joint minute, a ‘Further
Qualification of Combined Neurosurgical Report, 5
th
June
2017 on Isak Boshoff Foster’. In it, they stated that:
‘
We
now agree that there was a second deterioration in his neurological
condition due to further spinal cord injury due to the neck
not being
appropriate[ly] immobilised while being transported off the field.’
[17]
Both experts testified and explained their joint opinion. Thus, the
experts were in agreement
that the second injury was caused by the
conduct of the first aid personnel in carrying the first respondent
off the field. It
is easy to understand that to carry a person with a
suspected spinal injury off the field without carefully stabilising
the neck
of the person and with their head dangling about, may
severely aggravate the initial injury. This joint opinion was
therefore clearly
cogent and based on logical reasoning. In the
result, the high court correctly accepted the joint opinion.
Liability of the
MEC
[18]
I turn to the central issue before this Court, namely whether the MEC
was liable for the second
injury that the first respondent suffered
on 6 May 2006 at the rugby match held at Volkskool. Section 60 of the
Schools Act 84
of 1996 (the Schools Act) provides as follows:
‘
Liability
of State
.
— (1)
(a)
Subject
to paragraph
(b)
,
the State is liable for any delictual or contractual damage or loss
caused as a result of
any
act or omission
in
connection with any
school
activity
conducted
by a public school and for which such public school would have been
liable but for the provisions of this section.
. . .
(
3)
Any claim for damage or loss contemplated in subsection (1) must be
instituted against the Member of the Executive Council concerned
.
’
(Emphasis added.)
[19]
The rugby game was ‘an activity in
connection with an educational activity’ as described in
the
Schools Act.
[8]
It was
admitted in the plea that the MEC would be liable for damages caused
by a wrongful and negligent omission on the part of
Volkskool . A
legal duty to avoid negligently causing harm rested on it, based on
the relationship of
loco
parentis,
which
the educators and coaches have
vis-a-vis
the
learners as players during school games when the latter are in their
custody.
[9]
Wrongfulness
was thus rightly not in dispute and neither was causation. In the
result, the central question is whether the high
court correctly held
that Volkskool was negligent in failing to take reasonable steps to
ensure the presence of a competent and
properly equipped first aid
provider.
[20]
From the outset, counsel for the MEC conceded that based on the
evidence, which the first respondent
presented, both schools, in
particular Volkskool as the host school had to take reasonable steps
to ensure that competent and sufficient
first aid personnel were
present at the games on 6 May 2006 to deal adequately with
foreseeable injuries sustained by the first
respondent and any other
player on the day in question.
[21]
Counsel submitted that Volkskool could only be expected to take
reasonable steps and provide
the degree of care that was demanded by
the prevailing circumstances. Volkskool denied that it was directly
and solely responsible
for the first respondent’s second injury
because, on the common cause facts and experts’ opinion, the
second injury
was caused by the first aid personnel in the manner in
which they carried the first respondent off the rugby field; without
stabilising
the neck of the first respondent. Relying on the minority
judgment of this Court in
Chartaprops
16 v Silberman
(
Chartaprops
)
,
[10]
it was
contended that when Volkskool appointed the fourth respondent, as an
independent contractor, it acted reasonably. He submitted
that the
fourth respondent had the necessary expertise and that Volkskool took
reasonable steps under the circumstances.
[22]
Counsel for the MEC also submitted that there was one spine board
available in the morning. At
the time the first respondent was
injured, it was being used at another sports field. An ambulance was
available in the morning.
According to the Rugby Guidelines: The
Green Book, only two first aid personnel referred to as ‘first
aid trainees’
were required. The Green Book makes no reference
to their experience and qualifications. The third respondent provided
five first
aid personnel, including Mr van Staden, the sole director
of the third respondent. They attended to the first respondent
properly
and immediately on the field. The Green Book prescribed
‘transport’, without any specification including an
ambulance.
The presence of a medical doctor is a recommendation, not
a requirement. He argued that there was no evidence that linked the
second
injury to a lack of services on the day. He contended that
even if this Court was to find that the steps undertaken were not
sufficient,
at the time the first respondent was injured, it was not
necessary for Mr van Staden to have been registered with the HPCSA.
He
was experienced, well known at schools and his services had been
used over the years, without any complaints.
[23]
Over and above, he submitted that according to Mr Bantjies, the
Lichtenburg headmaster and coach
of the first respondent’s
rugby team, at the time of the incident, what Mr Meintjies (an
educator and the sports organiser
for the games at Volkskool) did was
reasonable: Mr Meintjies obtained a quotation that had all the
specifications for the games.
In the quotation he also requested the
qualifications of the employees of the fourth respondent.
[24]
In conclusion, he urged this Court to take into account that, the
incident occurred in 2006,
where only one first aid assistant was
required to be present during a rugby game. Back then, so counsel
submitted, the SA Rugby
requirements were extremely low, but (he
acknowledged) over time the requirements have increased.
[25]
As
Scott JA aptly puts it in
Sea
Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Duncan Dock Cold Storage Pty Ltd,
[11]
on negligence and its determination:
‘
A
formula for determining negligence which has been quoted with
approval and applied by this Court time without measure is that
enunciated by Holmes
JA
in Kruger v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A) at 430E-F. It reads:
“
For
the purposes of liability
culpa
arises
if –
(a) a
diligens
paterfamilias
in the position of the defendant –
(i) would foresee the
reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring another in his person
or property and causing him patrimonial
loss; and
(ii) would take
reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence; and
(b) the defendant failed
to take such steps to guard against such occurrence.”.’
[26]
Volkskool is a well-resourced school in the North West Province. Its
educators include dedicated
sports events organisers, trained by the
Department of Sports, (Arts), Recreation and Culture in partnership
with Department of
Basic Education. They are equipped to organise
games and are fully aware of the basic requirements that must be in
place at the
commencement of every game.
[12]
The
school has the necessary resources to manage all sports codes during
the various sports seasons. Its educators have the necessary
experience and knowledge to ensure that there is
inter
alia
equipment,
proper facilities and emergency services available during the games.
It is well-known that the school has hosted sports
events including
rugby for years. Any reasonable person in the position of
Volkskoolwould have foreseen the harm that occurred:
well knowing
that rugby is a dangerous contact sport that often leads to injuries.
Some more serious and with dire consequences,
as in this case, than
others.
[27]
Volkskool should have foreseen that if any neck injury was not
treated properly and immediately,
it could lead to a spinal injury.
Volkskool therefore had to take reasonable measures to ensure the
appointment of a first aid
provider and personnel that were qualified
for the job, if not qualified as prescribed by the Health
Professional Council of South
Africa (HPCSA) and in terms of the
Green Book, at least experienced and competent to deal with neck
injuries (typical in rugby
games) and the kind of injury the first
respondent suffered arising from the initial neck injury.
[28]
The first respondent (at 18 years then and not an expert in rugby or
neck injuries) stated without
contradiction that while he was lying
on the field he could not feel his legs. When the two first aid
personnel approached him,
he protested more than once (three times as
the record indicates) that they should not carry him off the field
without a spine
board. He said:
‘
I
did not know what was wrong with me…I just knew that they
should use equipment to carry me off the field as I did not want
anything that was wrong with me to worsen…I suspected I had a
neck injury…As they were carrying me off the field
my head
fell backwards and frontwards and my head was loose. I was not able
to keep my head still.’
[29]
The evidence of the first respondent, as supported by that of
eyewitnesses (Mr Mayne and a retired
medical doctor) shows that the
fourth respondent’s employees, in particular Mr van Staden,
were hopelessly incompetent and
ill-equipped. The facts speak for
themselves.
[30]
What did Volkskool do to ensure that the first aid personnel were
competent and properly equipped
to do the job? Nothing really. It is
on record that Volkskool engaged the services of the fourth
respondent on the simple basis
that Mr van Staden was well known in
the area and had provided emergency first aid services for schools in
the area. And that there
had been no previous complaints about the
fourth respondent. It was only discovered after this tragic incident
that the fourth
respondent did not have the necessary qualifications
and competence to do the work. On the probabilities, reasonable
enquiries
would have uncovered that Mr van Staden had a certificate
of an ambulance driver, which is not what the HPCSA prescribed
(according
to the evidence of Ms Nkoane of the HPCSA). Ms Nkoane
stated without contradiction that anyone who dealt with such serious
injuries
(which the first respondent suffered) had to have received
training in treating such injuries and should update themselves from
time to time. It is on record that Mr van Staden obtained his
certificate as an ambulance driver in 2006. The certificate did not
mention any of his qualifications. In other words, reasonable
scrutiny and even the most basic enquiry by Volkskool would have
established very easily that Mr van Staden of the fourth respondent
was not registered and did not have the necessary training
required
under the circumstances. This probably would have led to the
discovery of the incompetence of Mr van Staden and his staff,
as well
as the lack of sufficient equipment. It was indeed ‘chilling…
[to have] only one spine board available for
all three sports
disciplines’.
[13]
[31]
Contrary to what counsel for the MEC argued, this is not hindsight
wisdom. On the evidence that
the high court had before it, Volkskool
acting in
loco parentis
;
and as the host responsible for providing emergency services on the
day in question, failed to
take reasonable steps to ensure
that competent and properly equipped first aid personnel were
available to deal with the clearly
foreseeable possibility of serious
injuries and their consequences.
[32]
In any event,
Chartaprops
[14]
does
not assist the MEC at all for two reasons. First, counsel for the MEC
relied on the minority judgment of Nugent JA, which is
impermissible.
The view pronounced in the majority judgment is binding precedent,
which must be followed. Second, in
Chartaprops
,
the appointed contractor was not manifestly
imperitus.
[15]
On the
facts of this case, the fourth respondent through Mr van Staden was
evidently
imperitus.
Volkskool
made no effort to establish this and to find an alternative but went
according to the mere say-so that Mr van Staden had
provided the
emergency services for many years without any complaint about his
services.
[33]
It follows from what I have stated in the preceding paragraphs, on
the basis of the first respondent’s
unrefuted evidence
supported by medical evidence; that the conclusion the high court
reached cannot be faulted. The manner in which
the first respondent
was carried off the rugby field caused his second injury and the
sequelae
that
flowed therefrom. The steps Volkskool took in preparation of the
games to prevent the foreseeable injuries, were not reasonable
under
the circumstances. The appeal therefore ought not to succeed.
Costs
[34]
Last, I turn to the issue of costs. It is trite that the
determination of costs lies within the
discretion of the court (of
first instance). In recognition of this basic principle, a court of
appeal will only interfere under
limited circumstances ie where the
trial court did not exercise its discretion judiciously or where it
committed a material misdirection.
The trial court mulcted the MEC in
punitive costs for two reasons. First, that the MEC did not put up
any defence to the action.
Second, that because the experts were
agreed, there was no dispute on the second injury and thus no reason
for evidence to be led.
What the high court lost sight of, however,
was that the question of negligence was a material issue at the trial
and was a matter
of some complexity. The MEC was fully entitled to
dispute that issue and to present evidence in respect thereof. It
could not fairly
be said that the MEC acted unreasonably in its
conduct of the trial. Counsel for the first respondent therefore did
not defend
the punitive costs order with any enthusiasm.
[35]
The high court thus clearly committed a material misdirection that
enjoins this Court to interfere
in respect of punitive costs. For
that reason, the order as to costs (to the extent that punitive costs
were imposed) has to be
set aside. The appeal should therefore
succeed to the extent that paragraph 2 is amended. This, however,
cannot be deemed to be
success to the extent of entitling the
appellant to the costs of partial success as it would be ordinarily.
[36]
In the result, the following order issues:
1 The appeal succeeds
only to the extent set out in para 2 below.
2 Paragraph 2 of the
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
first defendant is directed to pay the first plaintiff’s costs,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel.’
3
The appellant is
directed to pay the costs of the appeal, including the costs of two
counsel.
_______________________
B C
MOCUMIE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Masipa AJA
(dissenting)
[37]
I have read the judgment of my colleague, Mocumie JA (the main
judgment). Regrettably, I am unable
to agree with its reasoning and
conclusion. My disagreement primarily pertains to its endorsement of
the high court's findings.
For reasons that will become evident, I
respectfully hold the view that the judgment of the high court was
premised on an erroneous
evaluation of the evidence and the law.
[38]
I agree with the main judgment in respect of its categorization of
the issues to be determined
as well as the conclusion reached in
respect of the secondary issue. I however disagree with the
conclusion that the appellant
was liable for the secondary injury
sustained by the first respondent. My dissent is based on whether a
case for negligence has
been made out against the appellant. The
nature of the first and the second injuries were not issues for
determination in this
appeal and the appeal turns mainly on the issue
of negligence. As was set out in
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa,
[16]
the
test for negligence is whether a reasonable person in the appellant’s
position would have reasonably foreseen harm befalling
the respondent
as a result of his conduct and if so, would have taken reasonable
steps to prevent the harm. If he would have, did
he take reasonable
steps to avert the harm that ultimately occurred.
[39]
I similarly agree with the main judgment on the legal
responsibility/liability imposed on the
appellant in terms of the
Schools Act. My view is borne out by the facts I set out hereinafter.
In my view, what the main judgment
omits are the facts relating to
the steps taken by Volkskool in preparation of the matches. On 6 May
2006, when the first respondent
was injured on his neck following a
tackle, two first aid personnel carried him off the field without
stabilising his neck with
a solid neck brace and without a spine
board. This resulted in the first appellant sustaining the second
injury. The negligence
in this matter revolves around the second
injury.
[40]
Prior to a rugby match commencing, there are certain requirements
which must be met. These requirements
are set out by the South
African Rugby Union (SARU). The minimum requirements in respect of
first aid personnel for club and school
matches in 2006 were:
‘
1.
PERSONNEL
1.1
a PERSON OR PERSONS SUITABLY TRAINED IN Emergency
Field-Side Care (A Trained First Aider or Paramedic).
1.2
At least 2 trained first aid assistants
1.3
Referees/coaches who have first aid knowledge
could be of immense value
1.4
Some form of transport should be readily available
if it is not possible to have an ambulance on standby. An ambulance
at the playing
venue is the ideal.
1.5
The presence of a Sports Medicine Trained Doctor
or a doctor experienced in treating sports injuries is highly
recommended
2.
FIRST AID EQUIPMENT
2.1
Trauma Board or any suitable Stretcher.
2.2
Acceptable First Aid Kit which should include the following: -
(i)
Splints
(ii)
Neck Braces
(iii)
Trauma Bandages
(iv)
Antiseptics and Strapping.’
A
note was added as follows ‘If the minimum medical requirements
at a field are not met, then a rugby match should not be
allowed to
take place. The referee
must
ensure
that these basic minimum requirements are met before allowing the
match to commence.’
[41]
In order for the appellant to be held liable for the second injury
sustained by the first respondent,
it must be proven that the
appellant was negligent. In my view, this was not proved. On the
evidence, the applicant took all relevant
steps to ensure compliance
with the requirements set by SARU. I say so because prior to the
rugby match, Volkskool engaged the
services of the fourth respondent
as a service provider. I accept, as was found by the main judgment,
that the conduct of the first
aid personnel in removing the first
respondent from the grounds without a neck brace and without a
stretcher was negligent.
[42]
According to the first respondent, as set out in his heads of
argument, the appellant is not
held vicariously liable for the
failure of the fourth respondent and its employees. He contends that
the appellant is liable for
the negligence of the employees of
Volkskool because they failed to vet and appoint suitably qualified,
experienced and equipped
first aid providers and to make sure that
the service provider is adequately equipped to comply with its
contractual obligations.
[43]
As regards the failure to vet the fourth respondent, the evidence is
that the fourth respondent
was a known service provider in
Klerksdorp, Orkney and Potchefstroom. Its services were not only
utilized by the local schools
but was also used by the local
university. Due to the fourth respondent’s busy schedule,
Volkskool sent the fourth respondent
dates of all the sporting
competitions at the beginning of the year and he would quote them as
and when necessary for each event.
They pre-booked the fourth
respondent.
[44]
As appears from the minimum requirements, it was not a requirement of
SARU that a first aid service
provider present at the matches should
be registered with the Health Professions Council of South Africa
(the HPCSA). Accordingly,
the fact that it subsequently came to light
that he was not registered is a red herring. The main judgment placed
much reliance
on this issue to arrive at a finding that the appellant
failed to act reasonably to ensure that the fourth respondent was
suitably
qualified.
[45]
Mr Meintjies testified that he was responsible for planning the
sports events for the periods
2002 to 2007. When he started at the
school, Mr van Staden was already providing the services. They used
the Leopard Rugby Union
(the third respondent) referees for the
match. As set out earlier, Volkskool was contracted to the fourth
respondent.
[46]
A copy of Mr van Staden’s certificate was kept in the school
sports file for contractors.
This was required as it was necessary to
know that Mr van Staden, the sole director of the fourth respondent,
was qualified to
do the work as set out in the Green Book for Rugby
(the SARU requirements). According to Mr Bantjies, they followed a
similar procedure.
After requesting for first aid services from the
fourth respondent, he received a quotation setting out costs for six
first aid
personnel, and the school paid in terms of the quotation.
Meintjies had, prior to the first respondent’s incident, never
heard of any incident involving the fourth respondent or Mr van
Staden’s services.
[47]
The evidence of Ms Dara Kgomotso Nkoane of the HPCSA is relevant to
the extent that it confirms
that Mr van Staden qualified as an
emergency care provider as was set out in his certificate issued by
Cape Provincial Administration
Ambulance Personnel Training Centre
and irrelevant for the determination of the appellant’s
liability. Had the registration
been necessary, it would have been
set out as a SARU requirement. In this regard, I differ from the main
judgement. I am satisfied
that the appellant satisfied itself that Mr
van Staden was suitably qualified. Having received Mr van Staden’s
certificate,
being aware of his credentials and experience, it was
reasonable to accept that he was suitably qualified. By way of
analogy, when
visits are made to doctor’s rooms daily to
consult them, patients are treated without any enquiries from the
HSPCA on whether
the doctor is registered or even qualified. To
expect that Mr Meintjies should have contacted the HSPCA to verify Mr
van Staden’s
qualifications is beyond the bounds of
reasonableness. I accordingly agree with counsel for the appellant
that when Volkskool appointed
the fourth respondent as an independent
contractor, it satisfied itself that it had necessary expertise, and
its actions were reasonable
under the circumstances.
[48]
In respect of ensuring that the fourth respondent was adequately
equipped, regard must be had
to the SARU requirements. Mr Meintjies
testified that on the morning of the tournament after the reception,
he met Mr van Staden
and other first aid personnel. He believed the
first aid personnel were employed at the nearby hospital and were
using their time
off to assist the fourth respondent. This evidence
was not challenged. There were two fields, A and B, and four first
aid personnel,
meaning two per field. He conducted an inspection and
was shown the first aid kit, ice, and a spine board on each field, a
neck
brace and straps. Mr van Staden told him that since they could
not let an ambulance stand on the premises, he was in contact with
the ambulance staff and would call them should it be necessary. It is
not in dispute that there was a provincial hospital 400 metres
from
the school and an ambulance could be called from there if needed. The
evidence of Mr Bantjies was that he saw an ambulance
in the morning
when he walked out from breakfast at Volkskool.
[49]
In order to satisfy the SARU requirements, Meintjies organized a
referee from the Leopards Rugby
Union. Mr Meintjies was satisfied
that the requirements were met and his undisputed evidence was that
having satisfied himself
that the requirements were met, his role
ended there. He then left for Klerksdorp for other school sporting
activities, returning
after the first respondent’s incident.
When he enquired from Mr van Staden about the absence of the spine
board when the
first respondent was removed from the field, he was
informed that they were used for prior injuries. Mr Mentjies’
evidence
was not disputed.
[50]
On the evidence, the SARU requirements in respect of equipment
required in rugby matches during
2006 were met. Having ensured
compliance, it was reasonable for Mr Meintjies to leave the school
since the responsibility shifted
from the school to the referee. It
was for the referee to ensure that all requirements were met before
the rugby game could start.
He had the authority to stop the game at
any stage where there was non-compliance with the requirements.
Accordingly, liability
in this regard should be placed at the door of
the referee and not the appellant.
[51]
In view of the reasons, I set out above, my view is that the first
respondent failed to prove
negligence on the part of the appellant.
Consequently, the conclusion arrived at by the high court holding the
appellant liable
is, in my view, misguided. I would accordingly
uphold the appeal with costs.
_______________________
M B S
MASIPA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant: S Joubert SC with J C Klopper
Instructed
by: The State Attorney, Pretoria
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:J D Maritz SC with P L Uys
Instructed
by: Gildenhuys Malatji Inc, Pretoria
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Concise
Oxford English Dictionary 12ed at 1258; See also
Roux
v
Hattingh
[2012]
ZASCA 132
;
2012
(6)
SA 428 (SCA) para 1.
[2]
This
is the essence of the words uttered by the second plaintiff, the
father of the first plaintiff, in shock and disbelieve after
his son
was severely injured during a rugby game.
[3]
A
third party claim refers to a claim made by a defendant during the
course of legal proceedings with the intention of enjoining
an
individual or entity that is not involved in the original action to
perform a related duty. One good example of a third party
claim is
an indemnity claim against a third party. In some situations, third
party proceedings are undertaken to determine how
negligence should
be apportioned between a defendant and a third party
(www//upcounsel.com Legal definition.)
[4]
Minister
of Justice v Ntuli
[1997] ZACC 7
;
1997
(6) BCLR 677
;
1997 (3) SA 772
(CC) para 22 -23. See also
Ex
parte Women’s Legal Centre: In re Moise v Greater Germiston
Transitional Local Council
[2001] ZACC 21
;
2001
(4) SA 1288
(CC);
2001 (8) BCLR 765
(CC); D E van Loggerenberg &
E Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
The Superior Courts Practice
at
B1-22 with reference to
Geard
v Geard
1943
CPD 409.
[5]
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
1977
(4) SA 298 (A).
[6]
Firestone
ibid
at 307C ie to correct orders for costs made without having heard
argument thereon.
[7]
Firestone
fn 6
above at 307C para (i) therein states: ‘the principle judgment
or order may be supplemented in respect of accessory
or
consequential matters. . .’
Firestone
para
(ii) reads: ‘The court may clarify its judgment or order, if,
on a proper interpretation, the meaning thereof remains
obscure,
ambiguous or otherwise uncertain, so as to give it effect to its
true meaning, provided it does not alter the “sense
and
substance” of the judgment or order.’
[8]
See
definitions in the Act.
[9]
J A A
Basson and M M Loubser (eds)
Sport
and the Law in South Africa
(2000)
at 5-30.
[10]
Chartaprops
16 v Silberman
2008
ZASCA 115; 2009 (1) SA 265 (SCA); [2009] 1 All SA 197 (SCA).
[11]
In
Caparo
Industries PLC v Dickman and Others
[1990] UKHL 2
;
[1990]
1 All ER 568
at 586, Lord Oliver observed: ‘the attempt to
state some general principle which will determine liability in an
infinite
variety of circumstances serves not to clarify the law but
merely to bedevil its development in a way which corresponds with
practicality and common sense.’
[12]
Department
of Sport and Recreation South Africa, in partnership with the DBE,
hosted the National School Sport Championships.
[13]
The finding of the high
court.
[14]
Chartaprops
fn
13 above.
[15]
Imperitus
is defined in the
English dictionary as inexperienced; ignorant.
[16]
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
[2015]
ZACC 36
;
2016 (3) SA 528
para 31.
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