Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 129South Africa
Senwamadi v Road Accident Fund (2022/2719) [2025] ZAGPJHC 129 (14 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 February 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Claim against the RAF. Plaintiff single witness – unknown third- party driver alleged. Accident report probably a fabrication. Copy of judgment to be sent to Minister of Transport, Minister of Police and CEO of RAF
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Senwamadi v Road Accident Fund (2022/2719) [2025] ZAGPJHC 129 (14 February 2025)
Senwamadi v Road Accident Fund (2022/2719) [2025] ZAGPJHC 129 (14 February 2025)
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#
# REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2022/2719
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
(3) REVISED: NO
14/02/2025
In the matter between:
## SENWAMADI PUTSOANE
JOHANNES
Plaintiff
SENWAMADI PUTSOANE
JOHANNES
Plaintiff
And
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
Summary: Claim against
the RAF. Plaintiff single witness – unknown third- party driver
alleged. Accident report probably a
fabrication. Copy of judgment to
be sent to Minister of Transport, Minister of Police and CEO of RAF
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
FISHER J
Introduction
[1]
This is a curious matter as to the merits.
A patchwork of contradictions and evidence tendered as objective in
the form of a police
report which directly contradicts the evidence
given by a single witness in the form of the plaintiff. It leads to
much speculation
as to how, and if, the alleged accident occurred.
But that is not the work of the court. The court’s purpose is
to attempt
to make sense of the evidence.
[2]
The plaintiff pleads that the motor
collision occurred at approximately 19h00 on 06 March 2021 on Houtkop
Road, Vereeniging when
he was driving his white Polo motor vehicle
with registration number O[…].
[3]
The description of the accident pleaded is
as follows: “an unidentified vehicle driven by an unknown
driver disturbed the
plaintiff’s vehicle and whilst taking
evasive action “Plaintiff drove into lose control of his motor
vehicle (sic)
and it overturned.”
[4]
It is later pleaded in addition to the
stock allegations of failing to keep a proper lookout/driving at an
excessive speed /failing
to keep control /disobeying of traffic
rules/failing to take steps to avoid the accident/driving without the
requisite care and
skill, that the insured vehicle was driven
recklessly either intentionally or negligently and that the plaintiff
whilst taking
evasive action drove into a pothole which caused him to
lose control of the vehicle and it overturned.
[5]
The injuries pleaded as being sustained
were a left scapula fracture and “general body pains”.
[6]
The claim was for a total of more than R
5.3 million.
[7]
It was pleaded in relation to the past loss
and loss of earning capacity that, at the time of the accident the
plaintiff was “self-employed”
as a roll preparer at
Arcello Mittal earning a gross salary of R12 000 per month.
[8]
The plaintiff was a single witness and so
the usual caution must be applied by this court in evaluating the
evidence.
[9]
The most perplexing piece of evidence which
was adduced, however, is a document discovered by the plaintiff which
purports to be
the formal accident report made to the police.
[10]
Before I delve into the report in issue, it
is apposite to consider the role played by the accident report
generally in cases dealing
with motor vehicle accidents.
The
structure and purpose of the standard Accident Report form
.
[11]
The accident report form is a staple
requirement in the realm of the law relating to motor vehicle
accidents – which includes
the law of delict, insurance law and
criminal law.
[12]
It thus stands to reason that the recording
of the accident is a matter of public interest.
[13]
The standard form provided for the
recording of the details as to the accident is designed to elicit the
relevant detail and provides
for a checking and recording process to
be undertaken by various interested office bearers.
[14]
The form is formulated on the basis that it
solicits or prompts information from the officer who is completing
it.
There is also
provision made for the form to be completed by the driver of a
vehicle involved. The formulation is such that it is,
on the face of
it, designed to obtain a comprehensive and verifiable record of the
accident.
[15]
It allows for the allocation of reference
numbers which allow for a record to be placed on a system of record.
[16]
The form was designed by its draftspersons
so as to solicit information describing all aspects of the accident
which would be relevant
to any interest or inquiry such as may be
needed in a court case of this nature. The design of the form is such
that it makes provision
for the person completing it to fill in
required fields and to tick various options which seek
comprehensively to set out common
variations as to accident types and
circumstances.
[17]
The form begins with an instruction to
“complete if applicable”. Next it has a field (by which I
mean an indication
of information required and a space provided to
the compiler of the report or the police official concerned
to insert the information in
manuscript)
for
the
capturing
of
a
case
number.
It
reads
“CAS
/
/”.
For
further official use provision is made for the insertion of a “serial
number” and a “capturing number”.
These numbers
seem to suggest a code which allows for sourcing of the report on the
national data base.
[18]
The form requires the accident date; day of
week; number of vehicles involved; time of accident; and information
as to the location.
It proposes options relating to whether the
accident occurred in a built-up area and the speed limit on the road
in issue.
[19]
The particulars of the driver of the
vehicles are to be supplied with prompts including options such as to
the race and gender of
the drivers.
[20]
The form provides for the ticking or
checking of various options as to road type (example freeway, dual
carriage and junction type
(e.g. T-junction or crossroads).
[21]
In relation to the details of the accident
there are
prompts
with various options as to key details of a
typical accident such as vehicle type (e.g. bus or station wagon);
the type of road
(e.g. tar gravel); condition of the road surface
(e.g. bumpy, good; potholes ); light ( e.g. daylight , dusk); weather
conditions;
position of the road on which the vehicle was travelling
before the accident (e.g. road shoulder or wrong side of the road);
the
manoeuvre being performed (e.g. U- turn); the vehicle damage
sustained (for example right front, rolled) and
the type of accident (e.g. head-on, side
swipe).
[22]
As to the indication of damage there is
also a stock diagram of a vehicle provided which allows for marking
so as to indicate position
of damage.
[23]
The form also makes provision for a sketch
plan and a brief description of the accident.
[24]
There are also fields relating to the
capturing of injuries and deaths and the details of persons involved
and witnesses.
[25]
It hardly needs to be stated that the
accident report is a crucial piece of
evidence in a claim against the RAF.
[26]
The primary purpose of the accident report
from the perspective of a plaintiff
in
a claim against the RAF is to prove that a motor vehicle accident
occurred; that it was reported by an interested person; that
it was
recorded and placed on the police and/or other relevant national
systems and is thus a matter of public record which can
be accessed
by all interested parties; and that the relevant
details of the accident have been set out
in the detail required for the record.
[27]
In the absence of such a report it would be
difficult for a plaintiff to provide independent evidence of the
occurrence of the accident.
This is especially the case when he is a
single witness.
[28]
The reporting of an accident is required by
law and the failure to report would, in the absence of a compelling
explanation as to
this failure to make the accident report be an
obstacle to a plaintiff’s case being proved.
[29]
With these parameters as to purpose and
formulation of an accident report, I move to set out details of the
accident report relied
on by the plaintiff.
The accident report
discovered and relied on by the plaintiff
[30]
The plaintiff discovered the accident
report and hospital records. These documents were admitted on the
basis that they are what
they purport to be. It was agreed that the
production of copies of the documents would suffice.
[31]
The plaintiff confirmed that he had
attended at the Vereeniging police station where he had made the
report.
[32]
He confirmed that he had participated fully
in the compilation of the report by the police officer, even to the
extent of having
his brief description of the accident as represented
on the form which was in English - being translated by the police
officer
into Sesotho so that he could understand it.
[33]
The form in question on the face of it
appears to reflect that it was completed by a police officer whose
name service number and
rank are all illegible. In fact, the “service
number” provided does not resemble a number at all. It is
simply and
obviously a scribble. It is unsigned by the person
completing it although a signature is required.
[34]
The form bears a stamp with the date 06
March 2021. The other details such as the police station from which
the report was issued
which should reflect on the stamp are
illegible.
[35]
There is a space on the form which solicits
the details of the office where the accident was reported and name of
the police department
– the options given being Metropolitan,
Municipal, Traffic or South African Police Services. The field for
this information
is blank.
[36]
A space that solicits an “occurrence
book no.” is also blank. This portion of the form also requires
a signature by
the officer or person completing it which is blank.
[37]
The accident register number is given as
123/ followed by a number which could be 2 or 3/2021.
[38]
Significantly, the portion for the
allocation of a case number is blank.
[39]
There is a further check solicited as to a
person who inspected the report. Initials, rank, surname, service
number are solicited
and this portion of the form also requires a
signature of the person concerned. There is an illegible stamp across
this portion
of the form. None of the information is provided and
there is no signature.
[40]
The provision for a capturing number is
also blank suggesting that there was no capturing of the document on
the system.
[41]
There is no indication of official
registration of this accident on the system.
[42]
In relation to the options provided to
assist in the details the options chosen are marked. The province
option marked is GP. The
location is provided in manuscript as
“Houtkop” and the suburb as Vereeniging and the city
/town also Vereeniging.
[43]
The part of the form where Particulars of
Driver A are required are filled out on the basis that the ID number
is written as 0[...]
and further numbers which are illegible. The
country of origin is said to be RSA. The name is stated as Senwamadi;
the address
is given merely as Zone 12 Sebokeng; the cellphone number
is recorded and the options of “Black” and “Male”.
[44]
The
type
of driving licence held is not specified although this is required by
the form.
[45]
The plaintiff testified that he had a
driver’s licence but produced no evidence of this.
[46]
The injury was indicated as “slight”.
The vehicle details were provided as - a white Polo Vivo with
registration number
DS 56 UKG.
[47]
The details required for Driver B are
designated as unknown between two solid tramlines written diagonally
across the portion of
the form designated for such details.
[48]
The portion of the form is marked ‘yes’
in relation whether there was a seatbelt fitted and ‘yes’
in relation
to a seatbelt being used.
[49]
It was indicated that there was no liquor
or drug use and that there had been no evidentiary testing of this
condition.
[50]
The statement was indicted with a check
mark on the basis that the following options among the obvious were
marked as instructed
by the form:
Vehicle
type
–
motor car;
Light
condition
-
night / unlit;
weather
conditions and
visibility
– clear;
road
surface type
- concrete;
quality
of road surface
- good;
road
surface
-dry;
Road marking visibility
-
NA;
obstructions
– None;
Overtaking
control
-None
( the options were barrier line, road sign, NA and None);
Traffic
control type
– barrier line;
road signs clearly
visible
– yes;
condition
of road signs
– good;
direction
of road
- straight;
flat
or sloped
– flat;
position
before accident
- not indicated ( the
options being correct road lane, wrong road lane but right side of
road, wrong side of road, road shoulder,
on road parking bay and off
road parking bay); the
vehicle
manoeuvre
- unknown ( among options
which included travelling straight and swerving).
[51]
The damage is indicated as to “left
front”, “right front” and “front centre”
from a list which
includes “rolled” and “roof”.
[52]
Recall there is also stock diagram which
allows for graphic indication. It was marked on the basis that the
damage was to the front
of the vehicle. No indications were given on
any other part of the vehicle.
[53]
There was no sketch plan produced, although
it is sought by the form.
[54]
A brief description of the accident was
provided in the field in which it was required and reads verbatim as
follows:
“
I
was about to be Hijacked, I tried to avoid the car (MAZDA Sting) that
was chasing me, then I lost my focus on avoiding potholes,
then it
hap during the chase w the thieves that I hitted a pothole with front
left wheel, after 5 seconds the tire of my car wheel
bursted and then
I lost control, then I got hurt ”.
[55]
Thus, in sum, with the aid of the format
provided by the form, the version which the plaintiff apparently gave
to the police on
his discharge from hospital is as follows. He was
travelling on Houtkop road in Vereeniging in a motor car with
registration number
OS 56 WK GP.
It
was night and unlit. The visibility was clear. The road surface was
concrete and the quality of road surface was good and dry.
There were
no obstructions. The traffic was controlled by a barrier line. The
road signs were clearly visible, and their condition
was good. The
direction of road was straight and it was flat. The vehicle manoeuvre
was indicated as being a “sudden start”.
[56]
A person driving a Mazda Sting motor
vehicle was chasing him with the intention of hijacking him. He tried
to avoid the Mazda and
in doing so lost focus during the chase. He
hit a pothole with his front left wheel and lost control of the
vehicle. His vehicle
sustained damage to the right front and left
front and front centre.
[57]
Apart from the lamentable lack of detail as
to the persons compiling, checking and capturing of the report,
central conundrum is
that it is reflected as having been taken down
by the police officer who compiled it at 10h00 on 06 March 2021 when
on the plaintiff’s
version, it had not yet happened at that
stage.
[58]
The anomaly as to the date stamp of 06
March 2021 and the date reflected by the person who purportedly took
down the statement is
inexplicable and indeed the plaintiff was not
able to give any cogent explanation as to how he is reflected as
having made the
statement on 06 March 2021 whilst, on his testimony,
at that time the accident had not yet occurred. According to the
pleadings
the accident took place on 06 March 2021 and on the
evidence of the plaintiff it occurred at approximately 19h00. This
accords
with the date of admission on the hospital records.
[59]
The plaintiff’s pleaded case is that
he remained in hospital for three days. The evidence given by the
plaintiff is that it
was more than a week.
[60]
The
plaintiff
testified that, on his discharge from hospital on about 15 March
2021, he attended the Vereeniging police station where
he made the
statement. But, on the face of it, the report was made on 06 March
2021 at 10h00. The plaintiff was unable to explain
this discrepancy.
[61]
Then there is the version which was made to
the plaintiff’s attorney on 07 July 2021 and filed in
accordance with section
19(f) of the Act. In this the plaintiff
states under oath that
“
an
UNKNOWN motor vehicle there and then driven by an UNKNOWN DRIVER
attempted to hijack me in that the vehicle was trying to collide
with
my vehicle. As I was trying to avoid the collision I lost control of
the vehicle, hit a pothole and the vehicle swerved off
the road and
collided with an object on the road.”
[62]
Thus, in this version there was one vehicle
trying to collide with his vehicle; he hit a pothole; lost control
and collided with
an object on the road. There was no indication that
the vehicle rolled in this version.
[63]
On the day of the hearing, the plaintiff
deemed it necessary to make another statement in terms of section 19
(f). In this statement
there were two motor vehicles driving behind
him when “suddenly a Mazda Sting then aggressively changed lane
to the right
side and then the other vehicle behind me accelerated as
if it wanted to bump my vehicle.” He continued:
“
I
also accelerated so that the one behind me doesn't dump my vehicle,
in the process, the Mazda Sting then tried to bracket me -
it drove
too close to my vehicle and to now avoid being collided by the Mazda
sting I continued to accelerate and, in the process,
hit a pothole,
lost control on my vehicle and it overturned.”
[64]
The three extra -curial versions of this
car chase and collision thus differ in salient respects. In the
accident report and the
first section 19(f) statement there was only
the Mazda Sting; in the second section 19(f) statement there were two
vehicles. The
pleaded version has only one vehicle and the
overturning. In the first section 19(f) statement there is no
overturning but there
is a collision with an object on the road which
is not in any of the other versions.
[65]
The version given in evidence was
elaborate. The plaintiff testified that on Saturday 06 March 2021 he
was on his way to pay a visit
to his cousin who resides in
Vereeniging. He was on a two-lane road driving in the slow lane. Two
vehicles were following him.
The one was a blue Mazda Sting but he
had forgotten the make off the other vehicle. It was maroon in
colour. The Mazda flicked
its lights at him. It left the slow lane
and proceeded to the fast lane. It was driven with the intention of
blocking his path
of travel. He thought that the maroon vehicle
wanted to collide with him. The road has a lot of potholes but he
knew it well and
normally knew how to avoid the potholes. He had to
travel fast because of the chase and was unable to navigate the
potholes. He
hit a pothole and the wheel burst. This caused him to
lose control of his vehicle, and it overturned.
[66]
In cross examination he could not explain
the contradictions in the various statements and the inconsistence of
the purported real
evidence in the form of the official accident
report.
## Discussion
Discussion
[67]
To my mind the inchoate accident report is
explicable only on the basis that it is a fabrication.
[68]
There is an obvious avoidance of any
identification of any person who was responsible for its completion.
There is also a failure
to provide a case number or any other feature
which can be traced to a recording on the police system of this
alleged motor vehicle
accident.
[69]
The pleaded case for the defendant was that
there was no accident. Unsurprisingly, the defendant could tender no
evidence.
[70]
To
come to a conclusion on the disputed issues, a court must make
findings on the credibility and reliability of a witness and the
probabilities. The court's finding on the credibility of a particular
witness
will
depend on its impression about the truthfulness
of
the
witness
which,
in
turn,
will
depend
on
a
variety
of
factors
including
the
witness' candour and demeanour in the witness-box, his bias, internal
contradictions in his evidence, external contradictions
with what was
pleaded or with his own extra-curial statements or actions, and the
calibre and cogency of his performance.
[1]
[71]
The
plaintiff
was a singularly unimpressive witness. The distinct impression
created by his testimony was that he was making up the
alleged car
chase. Either the accident did not happen at all or there was no
other vehicle involved. Either way, he must fail.
[72]
I deem it necessary, because of the
probable fabrication of the accident report, that this judgment be
brought to the attention
of the relevant authorities.
## Order
Order
[73]
I make the following order:
1.
The action is dismissed with costs.
2.
The registrar is directed to deliver copies
of this judgment to the Minister of Transport; the Minster of Police;
and the Chief
Executive Officer of the Road Accident Fund.
# FISHER J
FISHER J
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
# JOHANNESBURG
JOHANNESBURG
## This Judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 14 February 2025.
This Judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 14 February 2025.
Heard:
29 October 2024 & 26 November
2024
Delivered:
14 February 2025
# APPEARANCES:
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. V Mabasa
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Mkwanaza M I & Associates INC
Respondent's
Counsel:
Ms P Nziyanziya
Respondent
Attorneys:
State Attorney
[1]
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell Et Cie and Others
2003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) at para 5.
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