Case Law[2023] ZASCA 163South Africa
City of Cape Town v Mtyido (1272/2022) [2023] ZASCA 163 (1 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – widening of pleadings – wrongfulness and negligence – respondent injured as a result of open manhole under control of appellant – open manhole previously reported to an employee of the appellant.
Judgment
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## City of Cape Town v Mtyido (1272/2022) [2023] ZASCA 163 (1 December 2023)
City of Cape Town v Mtyido (1272/2022) [2023] ZASCA 163 (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1272/2022
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN
APPELLANT
and
NQULELWA
MTYIDO
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
City of Cape Town v Mtyido
(Case no 1272/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 163
(1 December 2023)
Coram:
GORVEN, WEINER and GOOSEN JJA and KOEN and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJJA
Heard
:
20 November 2023
Delivered
:
1 December 2023
Summary:
Delict – widening of pleadings – wrongfulness and
negligence – respondent injured as
a result of open manhole
under control of appellant – open manhole previously reported
to an employee of the appellant.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of the High Court,
(Erasmus J, Salie-Hlophe and Papier JJ concurring, sitting as a full
court of appeal).
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel where so employed.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Koen
AJA (Gorven, Weiner and Goosen JJA and Kathree-Setiloane AJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The
respondent, Ms Nqulelwa Mtyido, alleges that on 17 October 2013 while
walking along Khwezi Street, in Bardale, Mfuleni, a public
road
within the municipal area of the appellant, the City of Cape Town,
she fell into an open manhole which resulted in her sustaining
injuries to her right ankle. She sued the appellant in the Western
Cape Division of the High Court
[1]
(the trial court) for damages arising from her injuries. The trial
court separated the issue of liability from damages. It found
that
employees of the appellant wrongfully and negligently failed to take
steps to prevent the respondent from being injured by
the open
manhole. It declared the appellant liable for the damages, if any,
that the respondent had suffered in consequence of
the incident, and
also directed that it must pay her costs.
[2]
The
appellant appealed
[2]
against
the whole of the judgment of the trial court to the full court of the
Western Cape Division of the High Court (the full
court). The full
court
[3]
dismissed the appeal
with costs. This appeal is against the decision of the full court.
[4]
The appeal turns on an evaluation of the pleadings, the evidence and
the probabilities in the light of the pleadings.
Requirements
for liability
[3]
The respondent’s action is founded on the
actio legis
Aquilia.
The issue of liability required the respondent to
establish conduct which was wrongful and negligent, on the part of
employees
of the appellant, which caused her to be injured. The
respondent bore the onus of proving these requirements.
The
evidence
[4]
The respondent testified that around 20h00 on 17 October 2013 she was
walking along Khwezi Street, Mfuleni, a road perpendicular to
Ukubetana Street where she had resided from December 2009, to fetch
water from a tap at a nearby informal settlement, as she was without
water at her home. She had never been to that area before
and
was unaware of any manhole in Khwezi Street. It was becoming dark,
but there was a floodlight on a high mast in an adjoining
settlement,
which provided some light. She walked on the tar road as the pavement
was covered with sand and plant growth and she
feared she might step
on some glass. Suddenly she felt that she was falling and realized
her right leg had stepped into a ‘drain’,
which turned
out to be an open manhole without a cover. She called for help, and
two ladies who she had come across earlier, came
to her assistance.
They alerted her husband, who brought his vehicle and took her to the
Delft hospital.
[5]
The
respondent pointed out the location of the manhole in Khwezi Street
to representatives of the appellant during an inspection
during
November 2019. She also identified the location of the manhole on a
series of photographs introduced by the appellant (the
appellant’s
photographs). These photographs show a manhole with a cover in place
fitted, in the tarred road, flush with the
tarred surface. She
testified that ‘at that stage of the incident . . . this hole
was not in this fashion it shows here today’
and ‘that
there is a difference today . . .’ She was also referred to
three photographs (the respondent’s photographs)
in respect of
which her attorneys had provided written notice in terms of rule
36(10)
[5]
as ‘depicting
the scene of the incident.’ No objection was raised to this
notice thus entitling the respondent to produce
the photographs
without formal proof thereof. Although she did not know who had
captured the respondent’s photographs, she
was clear that
‘these photos depict the area and
how
it was during that period of this incident’
.(Emphasis
added)
[6]
The respondent’s photographs show ‘an object’ a
short
distance from the intersection of Ukubetana and Khwezi Streets,
which she said ‘is the same like this one’, referring
to
a close up photograph of the open manhole she said resulted in her
injury. She concluded by stating, ‘So hence I say it’s
the same manhole.’ The close-up photograph of the ‘object’
shows a manhole partially covered by what appears
to be two concrete
kerbing stones, similar to those forming the border of the pavement
in that area, but still leaving about half
of the open manhole
exposed. During the trial the appellant conceded that the area shown
on the respondent’s photographs
is the area concerned.
[7]
The respondent testified that there were no people staying on the
opposite
side of Khwezi Street, where the storm water pipes are
positioned on the respondent’s photographs, during October
2013; that
‘nothing else happens further down’ from the
spot where she was injured; that workers were busy preparing that
area;
that people started staying there only from 2018; and that the
tarred road (in Khwezi street) ended at a point somewhere between
the
manhole and the tap where she was going to fetch the water. A
comparison of the appellant’s and respondent’s
photographs
also suggest that Khwezi Street was subsequently extended
and tarred beyond the point indicated by the respondent. A witness
called
by the appellant, Mr Welman disputed this, and said the road
was already complete in 2013, but simply obscured by sand covering
it. However, this was not put to the respondent in cross examination.
[8]
The respondent also called the evidence of Mr Barnabas Zwehile Xwayi
(Mr
Xwayi). He previously lived across the road from the respondent
in Ukubetana Street, but has since retired to the Eastern Cape.
His
return for the trial was the first time he returned to the area since
2018. He had become aware that the respondent had suffered
an injury
when he saw her after she was discharged from hospital. He had
previously found an open manhole in Khwezi Street which
he reported
to an employee of the appellant. As this evidence is significant, it
is set out verbatim:
‘
The
year was 2013, but unfortunately I cannot assist the court by giving
the specific month because this was quite a while back.
I saw these
workers who were busy performing the duties on the road so I
approached them and asked them how can I be assisted by
having this
hole closed. So one these gentlemen who were busy working pointed to
somebody and said to me: there is the boss, go
and put your complaint
to him about this hole. And then I approached this one gentleman, I
took him to the hole and showed him
the hole. He promised me that the
hole will be closed.
Now
as time went by, like approximately two months now I got word that
somebody had fallen into that whole.’
When
questioned about the person he spoke to, he said:
‘
When
I looked at this gentleman I noticed they had the emblem of City of
Cape Town on their chests, whatever they had on, on their
tops, on
their hard hats as well as on the bakkie.’
He
also said that he took three poles with some ‘pellets’,
[6]
placed the poles into the hole and the pellets around them or over
the poles, and used a red-and-white tape in order to warn people
about the open hole. However, the people living in the nearby shacks
removed these, probably to make fire or use them in some other
way.
According to the respondent on her return to the area after her
hospitalisation, she inspected the area where she had been
injured
and saw the open manhole with some wood inside it. This observation
confirms that Mr Xwayi’s report related to the
same manhole as
the one which caused the injury to the respondent.
[9]
Mr Xwayi could not name the person he reported to. He also did not
make
any further reports. He initially had some difficulty when
testifying, to point to the location of the manhole on an aerial
photograph
of the area, but after some prompting and having
orientated himself somewhat, pointed to the same location identified
by the respondent
in her evidence.
[10]
The appellant adduced the evidence of three of its employees: Mr Ian
Quintus Welman, a
project manager in the Human Settlements Department
of the appellant; Mr Pierre Maritz, the Manager of Reticulation, of
the Engineering
Department of the appellant responsible for the
maintenance of manholes; and Mr Shafodien Hussein Jaffer, an
administrative assistant
employed by the appellant.
[11]
Mr Welman’s evidence related to lighting in the area from the
high mast in the adjoining
settlement known as Garden City. This
evidence was relevant mainly to the issue of contributory negligence
on the part of the respondent,
an issue not persisted with in this
appeal. As a project manager in the Human Settlements Department of
the appellant he was involved
with the housing development in that
area: he testified that the location where the respondent and Mr
Xwayi lived in Ukubetana
Street was in phase 3B of the development;
Khwezi Street marked the boundary of phase 3B; phase 3B was completed
in 2009 with,
to the best of his recollection, municipal services
having been installed shortly before completion; and the area on the
other
side of Khwezi Street opposite to phase 3B was phase 5A, which
had not been fully developed at that stage. This evidence is
consistent
with what appears from the respondent’s photographs
showing some storm water pipes lying on the far side of Khwezi
Street,
and an aerial photograph of the area dated 19 October 2013
(two days after the respondent’s accident) included with the
appellant’s
photographs, showing the area of phase 5A as
vacant.
[12]
Mr Welman could not provide exact details of the services installed
as he had not brought
the relevant documents with him. Furthermore,
much of the development handover was attended to by consultants on
behalf of the
appellant. Mr Welman confirmed that car traffic in that
area, especially Khwezi Street ‘would be minimal’ and not
‘congested
at any point in time during a day.’ In
contrast, Mr Maritz testified it was a ‘high travelled road’,
but his
observation might have related to the traffic position at the
time of the trial and not October 2013.
[13]
Mr Martiz testified that there were roughly 192 000 manholes under
the appellant’s
control during 2013. The appellant’s C3
system is used to record reports of missing manhole covers, whether
reported by the
public or when discovered by its employees. This
system reflected that nine missing covers were recorded for the
Mfuleni area during
the period from 1 August 2013 to 31 October 2013.
A manhole cover cannot be replaced without it being recorded on the
system with
a reference number. Where a complaint of a missing
manhole cover is received, the appellant endeavours to replace the
missing cover
within three hours. There was no record of a manhole
cover missing in Khwezi Street during 2013, or thereafter on the
system.
[14]
Mr Maritz inspected the manhole in question in Khwezi Street on 11
February 2020. The appellant’s
photographs show the condition
of the manhole around that time. He identified the cover on the
appellant’s photographs as
the heavier 2A type installed on
roads as they are able to carry the load of vehicles. It has an
additional hinge feature which
would make it difficult to remove the
lid, as it requires specialised knowledge of the workings of the
hinge mechanism. If this
type of manhole cover is required to be
replaced, then the frame of the manhole in which the cover sits would
also need to be replaced.
That would result in the tarred surface
around the manhole being disturbed as the new frame has to be set in
concrete. The concrete
would be clearly visible if the frame of the
manhole had been replaced. He opined that as this manhole as it
existed at the time
of his inspection, had a fitted cover
in situ
,
and the tar around the manhole appearing on the appellant’s
photographs had seemingly never been disturbed, that it could
not
have been left open without a cover since it was first installed. He
did however state in re-examination, in response to the
question
whether one can replace ‘that manhole without – with
simply replacing a cover in a manner that you cannot
see’, that
‘it is
highly unlikely
that you will get the perfect fit
. . .’ (Emphasis added).
[15]
He
testified, with reference to an aerial photograph of Khwezi Street
dated 22 February 2014, that an open manhole at the point
indicated
by the respondent and Mr Xwayi, would cause severe problems within
hours due to the volume of sand in the area which
would fill up the
manhole and block the sewerage flow. In his view it was therefore
unlikely that the manhole in Khwezi Street
was uncovered for
months.
[7]
[16]
Mr Jaffer testified that he had examined the C3 system records and
could not find a record
of a missing manhole cover in Khwezi Street
being reported, or a missing cover being replaced, during the whole
of 2013, or during
the period from 2014 until 2020. There was only
one report of a missing manhole cover in Ukubetana Street during
September 2014.
The
findings of the trial court and full court
[17]
The trial court accepted the evidence of the respondent and that of
Mr Xwayi as credible
and probable. Mr Xwayi was viewed as independent
and not showing any bias.
[18]
With regards to the appellant’s witnesses, the trial court
found that Mr Maritz’s
opinion that the manhole cover had never
been missing, as the manhole found there at the time of the trial was
the original one
because the tar around the manhole was homogenous
with the rest of the surroundings, was inadmissible. This was because
Mr Maritz
had not been qualified as an expert, and the provisions of
Uniform rule 36(9) had not been complied with. In the alternative it
found that Mr Maritz’s evidence would in any event be
irrelevant, because he was simply giving evidence on an issue the
Court had to decide.
[19]
It further concluded that Mr Maritz’s reliance on the records
drawn from the C3 system
to substantiate the point that no cover was
reported missing or was replaced in Khwezi Street during 1 January
2013 to 31 December
2013, was dependent on human intervention. This
implied that it is fallible, and that whatever was sought to be
inferred from the
records on the C3 system did not negate the direct
credible evidence of Mr Xwayi that he had reported the missing
manhole cover
to an employee of the appellant. It concluded that the
only reasonable explanation why there was no record of the missing
manhole
cover on the C3 system was either because the appellant’s
employee to whom Mr Xwayi made the report never forwarded the
complaint
to the relevant department, or that it was possibly
incorrectly recorded on the C3 system.
[20]
As to when the cover examined by Mr Maritz on 22 February 2020 was
installed, the trial
court concluded that it was any time after 31
December 2013. The records of missing and replaced covers in Khwezi
or Ukubhethana
Streets after 31 December 2013 were not made
available, and Mr Jaffer was not clear and certain in his evidence,
as he said that
he
thought
that he had looked at the records
‘from 2013 up until the current.’ The trial court
observed that the appellant’s
witnesses testified without
having the facts ‘to back up their bald assertions’, and
that this could have been avoided
if, with all the resources
available to it, the relevant records were available for reference to
be made thereto. Finally, it concluded
that the version of the
respondent was not ‘equipoised’ with that of the
appellant but was more probable than that
of the appellant.
[21]
The full
court concluded that the trial court had not misdirected itself in
any manner, including its findings on the facts, credibility
and the
reliability of the witnesses, which would justify it interfering with
its findings. It concluded that the respondent’s
version was
materially corroborated, reliable and not characterized by
contradictions and improbabilities. Whatever contradictions
there
were, were raised and considered by the trial court in a fully
reasoned judgment and dismissed. It concluded that even if
the
‘expert opinion evidence’ of Mr Maritz was not
excluded,
[8]
that this evidence
would nevertheless ‘not trump’ the evidence of the
respondent and Mr Xwayi. Accordingly, there was
no basis to interfere
with the trial court’s findings and its acceptance of the
respondent’s version.
[22]
The
appellant contends that the full court erred by not finding that the
trial court: failed to have regard to the evidence in its
totality;
failed to ensure that the conclusions reached accounted for all the
evidence; failed to distinguish probabilities and
inferences from
conjecture and speculation; failed to properly consider the
probabilities; failed to draw inferences only from
objectively proven
facts; and failed to follow the approach to factual disputes as
stated in
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell Et Cie and Others
[9]
(
Martell
)
in regard to irreconcilable versions.
Analysis
[23]
A court of
appeal will generally not interfere with findings of credibility made
by a trial court, because the trial court would
have had the benefit
of observing the witnesses when testifying, unless those finding are
clearly wrong. Similarly, an appeal court
will not lightly interfere
with the factual findings made by a trial court. As was said in
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
(
Mashongwa
)
:
[10]
‘
It
is undesirable for this court to second-guess the well-reasoned
factual findings of the trial court. Only under certain circumstances
may an appellate court interfere with the factual findings of a trial
court. What constitutes those circumstances are a demonstrable
and
material misdirection and a finding that is clearly wrong. Otherwise
trial courts are best placed to make such findings.’
[11]
[24]
The full
court correctly concluded that there was no basis to interfere with
the trial court’s findings on credibility. During
argument
before us the appellant’s counsel conceded that the credibility
of the respondent and Mr Xwayi could not be impugned.
[12]
The concession was correctly made. The respondent and Mr Xwayi were
both single witnesses in regard to the issues on which they
testified,
[13]
but they gave
their evidence in a clear and satisfactory manner, without
hesitation, and without exaggeration. They did not contradict
themselves and there were no contradictions between their evidence
and the established facts. Their evidence was reliable.
[25]
The appellant however argued, accepting that the respondent and Mr
Xwayi were credible
and reliable witnesses, that their evidence was
nevertheless improbable, and that they might be mistaken. It argued
that the more
probable inference to be drawn from the evidence that
the tar around the manhole as it existed at the time of the trial did
not
show any disruption or a concrete inlay, and that the C3 system
did not contain any record of a manhole cover being reported missing
and/or being replaced in Khwezi Street during October 2013, or
thereafter, is that the manhole in Khwezi Street had not been open
and without a cover in October 2013.
[26]
That conclusion firstly, would contradict the direct evidence of both
the respondent and
Mr Xwayi and reflect negatively on their
credibility, which is not only beyond reproach, but has been accepted
to be such by the
appellant. Second, it is dependent on that
inference being the most probable inference to be drawn from what is
circumstantial
evidence relating to the frame of the manhole not
being set in concrete, and the C3 system not containing any reference
to a missing
manhole cover in Khwezi Street in 2013 or beyond.
[27]
The
inference sought to be drawn by the appellant is not the most
probable inference that could be drawn. There are also other equally
probable inferences that could be drawn. The probability of the
inference which the appellant wishes to draw, was also not
established,
as the trial court had found. Other inferences could
include that the manhole as it existed at the time of the trial, was
fitted
after December 2013, as the trial court concluded, when the
roads for phase 5A were completed or tarred/retarred, some of which
seemingly occurred in the five months subsequent to the respondent
having sustained her injuries. The detail of whether the manhole,
which was
in
situ
at
the time of the trial, is the original manhole, or how it came to
exist in the condition shown on the appellant’s photographs,
is
not within the knowledge of the respondent, but peculiarly within the
knowledge of the appellant. As the trial court remarked,
the
appellant would have the records. This should include when the road
infrastructure was finally put in place as part of the
civil
construction work. The appellant had an evidentiary onus to place
this evidence before the trial court if it wished it to
infer, as the
most probable inference, that the frame of the manhole cover in
Khwezi Street had never been replaced, and if it
wished to negate the
respondent’s direct credible evidence that she had suffered her
injuries at that manhole.
[14]
[28]
Much of the
evidence was not seriously disputed.
[15]
What ultimately remained in dispute for resolution, was which one of
two mutually conflicting versions should prevail: the version
of the
respondent that her injuries were caused when she stepped into the
open manhole in Khwezi Street, after the open manhole
had previously
been reported to the appellant; or the version of the appellant that
it had no knowledge of an open manhole in Khwezi
Street, and, that as
a matter of probability, the manhole pointed out by the respondent in
Khwezi Street did not have a missing
cover during October 2013.
[29]
The test to
be applied in deciding between mutually destructive versions was
stated, amongst others in
National
Employers’ General v Jagers
[16]
(
Jagers
)
as follows:
‘
.
. . in any civil case . . . the
onus
can ordinarily only be
discharged by adducing credible evidence to support the case of the
party on whom the
onus
rests. . . . [W]here there are
two mutually destructive stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies
the Court on a preponderance
of probabilities that his version is
true and accurate and therefore acceptable, and that the other
version advanced by the defendant
is therefore false or mistaken and
falls to be rejected. In deciding whether that evidence is true or
not the Court will weigh
up and test the plaintiff’s
allegations against the general probabilities. The estimate of the
credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound up with
the consideration of the probabilities of the case and, if the
balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff, then the Court will
accept his version as being probably true. If however the
probabilities are evenly balanced
in the sense that they do not
favour the plaintiff’s case any more than they do the
defendant’s, the plaintiff can
only succeed if the Court
nevertheless believes and is satisfied that his evidence is true and
that the defendant’s version
is false. . . I would merely
stress however that when in such circumstances one talks about the
plaintiff having discharge
the
onus
which rested upon him on a
balance of probabilities one really means that the Court is satisfied
on the balance of probabilities
that he was telling the truth and
that his version was therefore acceptable. It does not seem to me to
be desirable for a Court
first to consider the question of the
credibility of the witnesses as the trial Judge did in the present
case, and then, having
concluded that enquiry, to consider the
probabilities of the case, as though the two aspects constitute
separate fields of enquiry.
In fact, as I have pointed out, it is
only where a consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate
where the truth probably
lies, that recourse is had to an estimate of
relative credibility apart from the probabilities.’
[30]
In reaching
a conclusion on the contradictory versions, the trial court,
following
Martell
and
Jagers
,
made findings on the credibility of the various factual witnesses,
their reliability, and the probabilities. Its approach cannot
be
faulted. It found that the probabilities based on credible evidence,
favoured the respondent’s version. Even if the probabilities
could be said to be evenly balanced, then based on the credibility of
the respondent and Mr Xwayi, the respondent still discharged
the
onus
[17]
of proving that her
injuries resulted from her having stepped into the open manhole in
Khwezi Street, which previously had been
reported to the appellant.
[31]
There is no basis to find that the full court erred in accepting the
trial court’s
findings of fact, and in endorsing its
conclusion.
Wrongfulness
[32]
Accepting the factual findings made by the trial and full court, the
appellant then confined
its argument to the legal issue whether the
respondent had established wrongfulness.
[33]
The
appellant argued that the finding of the full court that the
appellant owed ‘a legal duty to protect the public from
suffering any physical harm by the infrastructure through which it
provides services’, and its reliance on
Democratic
Alliance and Another v Masondo and Another
[18]
as
authority for that proposition, were incorrect. It pointed out that
Mashongwa
[19]
held that wrongfulness does not flow from a breach of a public duty
alone, but that a breach of a public duty is simply one of
the
factors that a court must consider in order to ascertain
wrongfulness. The appellant also drew attention to the caution
expressed
in
Municipality
of Cape Town v Bakkerud
[20]
that:
‘
It
is tempting to construct such a legal duty on the strength of a sense
of security endangered by the mere provision of a street
or pavement
by a municipality but I do not think one can generalise in that
regard. It is axiomatic that man-made streets and pavements
will not
always be in the pristine condition in which they were when first
constructed and that it would be well – nigh impossible
for
even the largest and most well-funded municipalities to keep them all
in that state at all times. A reasonable sense of proportion
is
called for. The public must be taken to realise that and to have a
care for its’ own safety when using the roads and pavements.’
The
appellant also argued that the respondent had not ‘lead any
evidence relevant to the discreet element of wrongfulness’
as
pleaded, and that it would be unreasonable
[21]
to impose liability for the respondent’s injuries on the
appellant, given the facts and circumstances of the case.
[34]
It would be
wrong however to confine the respondent’s case as regards
wrongfulness to what was pleaded. The allegations in
the respondent’s
particulars of claim
[22]
regarding wrongfulness, and also negligence, can rightly be
criticised as being of a general nature, terse, not fact specific and
unhelpful. The respondent’s case, both as regards wrongfulness
and negligence, became more specific during the evidence,
when it
emerged that she would contend that the open manhole had been
reported, some two months prior to her being injured, to
an
unidentified employee of the appellant who promised to have it
covered, but that nothing was done to do so, resulting in her
suffering injury.
[23]
[35]
This
evidence by Mr Xwayi was introduced without any objection from the
appellant. The evidence was fully canvassed during cross
examination.
The issues for adjudication accordingly came to be widened
[24]
beyond what was contained in the particulars of claim, to include
inter alia: whether the appellant had prior knowledge of the
potentially dangerous situation posed by an open manhole in Khwezi
Street; whether that knowledge gave rise to a duty of care owed
to
the respondent to prevent her from being injured; and whether the
appellant negligently breached that duty by failing to close
the
manhole.
[36]
It is trite
law that a legal duty may arise where a defendant has prior knowledge
of a potentially dangerous situation.
[25]
In casu
,
it is not suggested that a legal duty arose simply because the open
manhole was under the control of the appellant. The respondent’s
case was that a legal duty of care arose specifically because the
appellant had knowledge of the existence of the open manhole
which
was reported to its employee, and did nothing to cover the manhole.
[37]
Ultimately,
whether a duty of care arises, a breach of which would constitute
wrongfulness, depends on the legal convictions of
the community. As
it was put in
Le
Roux v Dey:
[26]
‘
.
. . what is meant by reasonableness . . . concerns the reasonableness
of imposing liability on the defendant for the harm resulting
from
that conduct.’
[38]
The
appellant relied on
Du
Plessis v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[27]
where numerous complaints of a hole which posed a danger had been
made to the municipality, and ignored. It argued by contrast,
that in
this appeal, the single report by Mr Xwayi of the open manhole to an
unknown employee of unknown authority, on an unknown
occasion, was
insufficient for prior knowledge of the dangerous situation posed by
the exposed manhole to be ascribed to the appellant,
to give rise to
a duty of care.
[39]
Every case will depend on its own facts. The date when the report was
made might not be
a specific date, but it is not indeterminate. Mr
Xwayi said it was just more than two months before the respondent
returned home
from hospital after she had been treated for her
injuries. The person to whom he reported might not be identified by
name, but
he was clearly an employee of the appellant, of some
seniority, as he wore a shirt and hat and drove a bakkie with the
appellant’s
emblem displayed thereon, and was acknowledged by
the team of workers as ‘the boss’ and the one to whom Mr
Xwayi should
make such a report. Mr Xwayi spoke to this person.
This person did not refer him to anyone else, nor did he decline to
assist.
Instead, he assumed responsibility for the situation and
undertook to close the hole. As much as one has an appreciation
for the difficult task the appellant has, to manage processes to
replace missing manhole covers, the process can only be improved
by
allowing members of the public to report missing covers to a
responsible employee of the appellant, for remedial steps to be
initiated.
[40]
The present
is not a case, as the appellant suggested, of unreasonably extending
delictual liability simply because the respondent
might be deserving
of some sympathy.
[28]
Ultimately, wrongfulness depends on considerations of public and
legal policy in accordance with constitutional norms and the
reasonableness of imposing liability on the appellant.
[29]
The legal convictions of the community require that where the
appellant had knowledge of an open manhole, the failure to cover
the
hole within a reasonable time, resulting in possible injury to a
member of the public, would be wrongful.
[41]
Whether the appellant had knowledge of the open manhole, or not, is a
question of fact.
Obviously, the possibility for false claims always
exists, but the legal convictions of the community do not dictate
that because
some claims might be fraudulent, therefore genuine
claims should for that reason alone be disallowed. In the present
instance,
where the credibility of the respondent is not impugned,
difficulties in deciding whether the claim might be false and
contrived
do not arise.
[42]
The appellant was critical during argument of Mr Xwayi not following
up on his initial
report, that he had not complained more than the
one time that he did, and that he had not advised his neighbours,
including the
respondent, of the danger posed by the open manhole.
But why should he? Mr Xwayi did not present as a sophisticated person
well
versed in matters of municipal administration. He completed a
standard 4. In the spirit of discharging a self-imposed public duty,
he took the trouble of reporting a dangerous situation to an
employee, designated by the workers working in the area as the
‘boss’.
This person did nothing to dispel the belief
harboured by Mr Xwayi that he was a person to whom he could report.
As a matter of
legal policy, the legal convictions of the community
would view what Mr Xwayi did as sufficient to bring the existence of
this
danger to the attention of the appellant. If an employee in
authority chooses not to give adequate attention to such reports, or
fails to escalate such report to the appropriate persons through the
correct channels, then the issue is one of better education
and
ongoing training of the appellant’s employees being required.
That is, if such education is in fact required, because
on the facts
of this matter, what happened cannot be ascribed to a lack of
knowledge of procedures. The workers referred Mr Xwayi
to their
‘boss’ and the ‘boss’ did not try to avoid
the complaint but promised to deal with it. Either
he simply
neglected to do so, or having done so, there was a breakdown in
communication elsewhere.
[43]
Counsel
argued that if liability was imposed on the appellant that it would
open the floodgates to open ended claims, and that this
court should
place a ‘brake on liability.’
[30]
I disagree with that argument. Every claim must obviously be
scrutinised carefully and dealt with on its own facts. Mr Xwayi’s
evidence that he reported the open manhole is either true or not –
there is no scope for a mistake. The appellant has accepted
that Mr
Xwayi was a credible witness. That he made the report can therefore
be accepted as the truth.
[44]
To summarise, the legal convictions of the community dictate
that liability should
be conferred on the appellant. The fear of
endless liability is misplaced. It has not been established that the
full court was
misdirected in upholding the finding of the trial
court that the omission to take steps to have prevented injury being
occasioned
to the respondent by her stepping into the open manhole,
was wrongful.
Negligence
[45]
As regards
negligence, following on the finding that Mr Xwayi had reported the
existence of the danger posed by the open manhole
cover to an
employee of the appellant who was obliged to act on such report, the
fact that the employee apparently did not do so,
or alternatively
having reported it, an unknown employee failed to record it on the C3
system and failed to react thereto appropriately,
constitutes
negligence. The well know test for negligence in
Kruger
v Coetzee
[31]
is satisfied. The appellant’s employees simply failed to do
what objectively was reasonably required. The appellant is directly
alternatively vicariously liable for their negligence.
Conclusion
[46]
An appeal is not a fresh rehearing of the disputed issues. It is for
the appellant to show
that the full court had committed a material
misdirection affecting the outcome it reached - only then could this
court interfere.
No basis has been advanced before the full court or
this court to support the conclusion that the trial court had been
guilty of
any misdirection which would affect the outcome of the
trial.
[47]
The full court also confirmed the trial court’s judgment that
there was no basis
for finding contributory negligence on the part of
the respondent. Before us the appellant did not argue for a finding
of contributory
negligence. According to its notice of appeal it
simply sought an order replacing the order of the trial court with an
order that
the appellant is not liable for the damages that the
respondent suffered in consequence of the accident which occurred on
17 October
2013, with no alternative of an order determining
contributory negligence on the part of the respondent, should it be
unsuccessful.
The conclusion in the appellant’s heads of
argument asked that the appeal against ‘the whole of the
judgment (except
the finding as to contributory negligence) of the
Full Court’ be upheld. There was however no such finding of
contributory
negligence by the full court, or the trial court.
[48]
The appeal against the judgment of the full court accordingly falls
to be dismissed. There
is no reason why the costs of the appeal
should not follow the result. Both parties employed two counsel. It
is appropriate that
the costs should include the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
Order
[49]
The appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel where
so employed.
________________________
P
A KOEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:P Botha SC with A du Toit
Instructed
by: MHI Attorneys, Bellville.
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
respondent: H McLachlan with L Gabriel
Instructed
by: Kruger & Co Attorneys, Goodwood.
Phatshoane
Henney Inc,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Dolamo J.
[2]
Leave to appeal was dismissed by the trial court with costs. On
petition leave to appeal was granted to the full court of the
Western Cape Division of the High Court.
[3]
Per Erasmus J, with Salie-Hlophe and Papier JJ concurring.
[4]
Special leave to appeal was granted by this court on 10 November
2022. The costs of the application for leave to appeal to the
SCA
were directed to be costs in the appeal.
[5]
The notice in terms of rule 36(10) was served on 4 February 2019,
that is more than one year prior to the trial commencing.
[6]
Presumably Mr Xwayi meant ‘pallets.’
[7]
There was however no evidence whether the sewerage flow had been
blocked or not, or whether the sewerage service was indeed in
place
and used yet.
[8]
This issue can be disposed of briefly as follows: Rule 36(9) was not
complied with. However, the evidence that a manhole, if
replaced,
would show the concrete surround was factual. What inference was to
be drawn from the manhole at the time of the trial
not having such
concrete surround was for the trial court to decide - not isolated
to that fact, but in the light of all the
circumstances of the case.
The conclusion of both courts that it is irrelevant what inference
Mr Martiz drew from the facts because
that is what the trial court
had to decide, is correct.
[9]
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell Et Cie and Others
2
003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) para 5 held:
‘
On
the central issue, . . .there are two irreconcilable versions. So,
too, on a number of peripheral areas of dispute which may
have a
bearing on the probabilities. The technique generally employed by
the courts in resolving factual disputes of this nature
may
conveniently be summarised as follows. To come to a conclusion on
the disputed issues a court must make findings on (a) the
credibility of the various factual witnesses; (b) their reliability;
and (c) the probabilities. As to (a), the court’s
findings on
the credibility of a particular witness will depend on its
impression about the veracity of the witness. That in
turn will
depend on a variety of subsidiary factors, not necessarily in order
of importance, such as (i) the witness’ candour
and demeanour
in the witness – box, (ii) his bias, latent and blatant, (iii)
the internal contradictions in his evidence,
(iv) external
contradictions with what was pleaded or put on his behalf, or with
established fact or with his own extra-curial
statements or actions,
(v) the probability or improbability of particular aspects of his
version, (vi) the calibre and cogency
of his performance compared to
that of other witnesses testifying about the same incident or
events. As to (b), a
witness’ reliability will
depend, apart from the factors mentioned under (a)(ii), (iv) and (v)
above, on (i) the opportunities
he had to experience or observe the
event in question and (ii) the quality, integrity and independence
of his recall thereof.
As to (c), this necessitates an analysis and
evaluation of the probability or improbability of each party’s
version on
each of the disputed issues. In the light of its
assessment of (a), (b) and (c) the court will then, as a final step,
determine
whether the party burdened with the onus of proof has
succeeded in discharging it. The hard case, which will doubtless be
the
rare one, occurs when a court’s credibility findings
compel it in one direction and its evaluation of the general
probabilities
in another. The more convincing the former, the less
convincing will be the latter. But when all factors are equipoised
probabilities
prevail.’
[10]
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
[2015] ZACC 36; 2016 (3) SA 528 (CC).
[11]
Ibid para 45. See also
S
v Hadebe and Others
1997 (2) SACR 641
(SCA) 645E-F;
Santam
Bpk v Biddulph
2004 (5) SA 589
(SCA) para 5;
Minister
of Safety and Security & Others v Craig and Others NNO
[2009] ZACC 97
;
2011 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para 58.
[12]
This was part of a more general concession that no adverse
credibility finding should be made against any of the witnesses.
[13]
The respondent was criticised, because her evidence that she stepped
into the manhole in Khwezi Street was disputed, for not
calling the
evidence of the two ladies who had come to her assistance, or her
husband who came to collect her there, as she bore
the onus of
proving the incident, and there was no suggestion on the record that
they were not available to testify. But, as
has been held in
Rand
Cold Storage and Supply Co Ltd v Alligianes
[1968] 2 All SA 241
(T) at 243:
‘
It
is axiomatic that a party need not, and cannot be blamed if he does
not, call all the witnesses who may give pertinent evidence;
he is
entitled to take the risk of offering less than all the evidence
available to him if he is of the opinion that what he
has offered
would suffice to one. He may of course in the result be shown as
having been too confident but that is something
different from being
found to have deliberately suppressed evidence unfavourable to him –
which is the conclusion sought
to be drawn here. In Brand v Minister
of Justice and Another,
1959 (4) SA 712
(AD), it is said at p 715:
“
this
statement does not, however, mean any more than that, if, in the
absence of the testimony of the witness in question, the
evidence is
otherwise equally balance, the onus will come into effect of
operation. The statement in question does not mean that
any greater
obligation to call the witness rests upon the onus – bearing
party: it merely means that, if he does not call
the witness, he
runs the risk of the onus of proving decisive against him. “’
In
this matter, the evidence was not evenly balanced, but it favoured
the respondent.
[14]
The evidence of Mr Jaffer suggested that a situation could arise
where workers ‘reserved the stock from their store but
it is
not specific that it is – what will happen if say for instance
they draw 10 drain covers or sorry 10 manhole covers
it is not
always specific to a specific job they would then ja replace those
covers.’ As much as Mr Welman said it was
the original
manhole, he had no records with him and did not express any basis
for coming to that conclusion.
[15]
This included: that the respondent suffered an injury to her ankle
when she stepped into an open manhole; that the manhole pointed
out
by the respondent, as corroborated by Mr Xwayi, is the one situated
in Khwezi Street; that the respondent’s photographs
of the
manhole shows it as having been left open and still being open when
photographed; that the manhole cover in the same area,
depicted on
the appellant’s photographs, shows a manhole with a cover as
it existed more than six years after the incident,
on an undisturbed
tar surface in Khwezi Street; and that some further infrastructural
work was carried out after October 2013
in the general area in
respect of Khwezi Street in respect of phase 5A of the development.
[16]
National
Employers’ General v Jagers
National
Employers’ General v Jagers
National
Employers’ General v Jagers
1984 (4) SA 437
(E) at 440D – 441A.
[17]
National
Employer General v Jagers (supra).
[18]
Democratic
Alliance and Another v Masondo and Another
[2002] ZACC 28
;
2003 (2) SA 413
(CC) para 17
[19]
Mashongwa
para
28.
[20]
Municipality
of Cape Town v Bakkerud
[2000] ZASCA 174
;
[2000] 3 All SA 171
(A) paras 28 and 29.
[21]
This was with reference inter alia to
Minister
of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden
2002 (6) SA 341
(SCA) para 12.
[22]
As regards wrongfulness it was alleged that the appellant owed a
legal duty to members of the public and to her in particular:
to
ensure that areas within its jurisdiction and/or under its control
and to which members of the public had unrestricted access
were
free of any dangers
and/or potential dangers; to ensure that adequate measures were
taken in all areas within its jurisdiction and/or under its control
to which members of the public had unrestricted access
to
safe guard members
of the
public against any dangers
and/or potential dangers; and to take reasonable precautions
to
warn members of the public of any dangers
and/or potential dangers in all areas within its jurisdiction and/or
under its control to which the members of the public had
unrestricted access. As regards negligence, the respondent alleged
that the appellant breached the duty of care alleged.
[23]
It was wrongly argued by the respondent before the trial court that
these further grounds of wrongfulness and negligence, were
not
required to be pleaded because they constitute evidence and ‘one
does not plead evidence.’ It should have been
pleaded. It is
the how and when and to whom the open manhole was reported to result
in the appellant having knowledge thereof
and allegedly giving rise
to a duty of care, that would constitute evidence that need not be
pleaded. But that it will be contended
that such a duty existed and
that the breach thereof would be relied upon as constituting
wrongfulness, should be pleaded.
[24]
Shill v
Milner
1937 AD 105.
[25]
Van
Vuuren v Ethekwini Municipality
2018 (1) SA 189
(SCA) para 21 and 24.
[26]
Le Roux
v Dey
(Dey)
[2011] ZACC 4
;
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC) para 122.
[27]
Du
Plessis v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[2009] ZAECGHC 54 paras 11 and 12.
[28]
South
African Hang and Paraglyding Association and Another v Bewick
[2015]
ZASCA 34
;
2015 (3) SA 544
(SCA) para 3.
[29]
Dey
para
122.
[30]
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development
[2014]
ZACC 28
;
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC) par 20. The facts in the present appeal
are also distinguishable from what prevailed in
BE
obo JE v Minister of the Executive Council for Social Development,
Western Cape
[2021]
ZACC 23
;
2021 (1) BCLR 1087
(CC) paras 1, 2, 10 and 25 as to whether
there could be a legal duty to ensure the safety of each and every
childcare facility.
In the present appeal, the legal duty is
confined to one manhole that was uncovered which had been reported
to the appellant.
[31]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966 (2) SA 428
(A) at 430E held that.
‘
For
the purpose 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.’
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