Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 558South Africa
Arends v Road Accident Fund (7101/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 558 (7 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Arends v Road Accident Fund (7101/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 558 (7 May 2025)
Arends v Road Accident Fund (7101/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 558 (7 May 2025)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 7101/2019
DATE
:
07-05-2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between
MARTAIL
ABIE ARENDS
Plaintiff
and
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT
WEIDEMAN,
AJ
: The accident from which this
claim arose occurred on 31 May 2016 and at which stage the plaintiff,
who was a minor at the time,
was a pedestrian.
Inter
partes
the aspect of negligence had
been resolved and the defendant had accepted liability for 100% of
such damages as the plaintiff may
be able to substantiate.
According to the
plaintiff's particulars of claim, and in particular paragraph 7
thereof, the plaintiff sustained the following
injuries as a result
of the accident:
1.
An injury to the right leg;
2.
Lacerations, right leg;
3.
Head injuries; and
4.
Other serious injuries.
Paragraph 9 of the
particulars of claim, as amended, set out the plaintiff’s claim
as follows:
1.
Future medical expenses:
Undertaking;
2.
General damages:
R850 000;
3.
Past and future loss of income:
R3 749 734.
At the commencement of
the hearing counsel moved an application in terms of Rule 38(2) and
which was limited to the items contained
in the application relevant
for the assessment of quantum. The application was granted.
A further application was
moved from the bar in terms of Rule 33(4) for the aspect of general
damages to be postponed
sine die
. That application was also
granted.
The plaintiff is entitled
to an undertaking in terms of Section 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident
Fund Act for such future hospital,
medical and ancillary expenses as
he may require, as a result of the accident that occurred on 31 May
2016.
The medico-legal reports
obtained on behalf of the plaintiff contain a number of issues which
make the assessment of the claim more
problematic than what it should
be. For instance, according to the documentation filed in respect of
the aspect of negligence,
the plaintiff was on crutches at the time
when the accident occurred.
This fact was conveyed to
one or two of the experts, but in respect of all the other experts,
any prior medical history was denied.
The court is accordingly
deprived of accurate details as to the circumstances which led to the
plaintiff being on crutches at the
time of the current accident and
the possible impact thereof on the claim before it.
Counsel indicated from
the Bar that the plaintiff had sprained his ankle on the morning of
the accident. This is in conflict with
the information conveyed to
some of the medical experts which recorded references to an accident
approximately two months earlier.
A further difficulty in
the matter relates to the plaintiff's reporting to the various
experts as to what his career aspirations
had been. In this regard he
gave varying alternatives to different experts.
The plaintiff's claim, as
formulated in the actuarial report on CaseLines at 006-84, is that he
would have completed Grade 12 at
the end of 2022. During 2023 he
would have completed a higher certificate: NQF level 5 at a TVIT
College.
He would have remained
unemployed for a period of approximately 21 months, whereafter he
would have entered the labour market in
October 2025 at the lower
quartile of wages for semi-skilled workers in the non-corporate
sector. Income is then postulated to
increase uniformly over a period
of six years to the average of the medium and upper quartile of
semi-skilled workers in the non-corporate
sector.
The current value of the
annual income projected for at that stage is R152 372. From
there the plaintiff's income leaps, from
R152 372 per annum, to
R477 870 per annum at age 45, being the average package on the
Paterson scales between the levels B5
and C1.
Counsel was asked whether
there was any reason why the calculation moved from the non-corporate
sector into the Paterson scales,
- the formal corporate sector, but
counsel was unable to give an explanation or to point to any facts to
motivate the move. The
court was not referred to and neither could it
find any facts on which this adjustment could be based, save for the
unsubstantiated
opinion of the industrial psychologist.
As far as the plaintiff's
post accident income is concerned, given the severity of the head
injury, as it is set out in the various
medico-legal reports, his
income would remain modest and there is no quarrel with this
calculation by the actuary.
The only figures
available to the court would are the figures in the actuarial report.
These figures must be adjusted to accommodate
the uncertainties as
had been set out above and to make provision for the length of the
period of the calculation.
The actuary calculated
the value of the plaintiff's income, uninjured, as R6 173 787.
This amount is to be reduced by
a factor of 1% per annum over the
duration of the calculation. This has the effect of reducing the
amount by 44%. The result is
an amount for future loss of income,
uninjured, of R3 457 321.
The calculation of the
plaintiff’s income, having regard to the accident, is
significantly lower, i.e. R1 691 777
than the R6 173 787
projected but for the accident. This reduced amount compensates
adequately for all the long term
sequelae of the injuries sustained
by the plaintiff.
There is therefore no
need to increase the contingency and the same contingency, i.e. 44%
is also applied to the having regard to
- figure. The net result is
that the value of the income, injured, is reduced to R947 395.
If this amount of
R947 395 is deducted from the uninjured income of R3 457 321,
the plaintiff's claim for future
loss of income and/or impairment of
earning capacity is R2 509 926.
My order is therefore as
follows:
1.
The application in terms of Rule 38(2) is
granted.
2.
The application in terms of Rule 33(4)
separating out general damages and postponing same
sine
die
is granted.
3.
My order records that the aspect of
negligence had been resolved between the parties on the basis that
the defendant accepts liability
for 100% of such damages as the
plaintiff may be able to substantiate.
4.
The plaintiff is entitled to an undertaking
in terms of Section 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act for such
future hospital,
medical and ancillary expenses as he may require, as
a result of the accident that occurred on 31 May 2016.
5.
The defendant is liable to pay the
plaintiff the amount of R2 509 926 in respect of loss of
income.
6.
The plaintiff having been substantially
successful is entitled to his party and party costs as taxed or
agreed, counsel’s
fees to be on Scale B.
WEIDEMAN, AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE
:
……………….
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