Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 592South Africa
A.B. v Emerald Safari Resort (Pty) Ltd (2019/21688) [2025] ZAGPJHC 592 (26 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 May 2025
Headnotes
inferential reasoning requires facts and cannot amount to speculation. He pointed out that in the present case there are no facts, and that the case is exacerbated by the fact that the plaintiff’s letter of demand and her particulars of claim do not speak to each other. [20] With reference to evidence of something on the floor, counsel referred to the decision in Monteoli v Woolworths (Pty) Ltd [4] where the court noted that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## A.B. v Emerald Safari Resort (Pty) Ltd (2019/21688) [2025] ZAGPJHC 592 (26 May 2025)
A.B. v Emerald Safari Resort (Pty) Ltd (2019/21688) [2025] ZAGPJHC 592 (26 May 2025)
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sino date 26 May 2025
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2019-21688
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
26/05/2025
In the matter between:-
A[…]
B[...]
Plaintiff
and
EMERALD
SAFARI RESORT (PTY) LTD
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Mfenyana J
[1]
The plaintiff instituted proceedings against the defendant, (the
Resort) for damages arising from injuries she sustained
at the
defendant’s premises on 26 December 2018. The plaintiff alleges
that she tripped over an uneven wooden beam, causing
injuries to her
right foot. The plaintiff thus contends that the defendant was
negligent in that it did not ensure that the premises
were safe for
its patrons.
[2]
The parties agreed that the issue of liability be determined
separately from quantum, with the issue of quantum postponed
sine
die
.
[3]
The defendant has defended the action and denies that it was
negligent in any way, claiming that the plaintiff’s
own
negligence is the sole cause of the incident, and the injuries she
sustained.
[4]
In her particulars of claim, the plaintiff alleges that on 26
December 2018, she tripped over an uneven wooden beam at
the resort,
resulting in severe injuries to her left foot and a broken right
ankle. It is common cause that the plaintiff was admitted
to hospital
and underwent surgery on 27 December 2018. She was discharged from
hospital on 28 December 2018 but required a plaster
of Paris (cast)
for a period of 6 weeks, and physiotherapy. The plaintiff claims an
amount of R378 902.77, made up as follows:
4.1. Past hospital
medical expenses: R40,859.34
4.2. Future
hospital medical expenses: R50,000.00
4.3. Past and
future loss of earnings: R73,043.43
4.4. Domestic
assistance costs: R15,000.00
4.5. General
damages for pain and suffering: R200,000.00
Plaintiff’s
case
[5]
Two witnesses testified for the plaintiff; the plaintiff herself and
her husband, V[…] R[…] B[...] (Mr B[...]).
[6]
In essence, the evidence is that on 26 December 2018 at approximately
11h00, the plaintiff, her husband and their 7 year
old son were on a
family outing at the Resort, generally known as Aqua Dome.
The
main purpose of the outing was to take their son there, as the Resort
has various activities for children. Further evidence
reveals that on
the day in question, a lot of people attended the resort for
entertainment.
[7]
Having paid the required entrance fee the B[...]s entered the Aqua
Dome and found a spot to settle in, whereafter they
placed their
valuables in a locker. They thereafter got into the pool and swam for
a short while.
They allowed their son to swim in
the lazy pool as they could see him from where they were seated. They
then moved to sit at a bench
that had become available.
[8]
Both Mr. and Mrs.
Ms B[...] testified that
they did not
notice any warning signs when they
entered. Mr. B[...], however, further testified that he saw the
warning signs when he returned
to the resort about a week later and
has no doubt that the warning signs were always there.
[9]
When lunchtime was approaching, Mrs. B[...] left
to buy lunch from the food stalls. She had to go around the bend,
down three long
stairs. She testified that it was so congested that
she had to ask, “excuse me, excuse me”, all the way to
get through
the people who were standing there. She tripped on
‘something’ on the second step and staggered ahead trying
to cling
to the rails. She broke her right ankle when she fell on the
third step. She tumbled forward, landing on the patch of grass by the
GUN barrel. She used her arm to support her leg so it wouldn’t
break entirely. When her son showed up, she requested him
to go and
call his father, which he did.
[10]
Mr. B[...] arrived shortly thereafter, whereafter a lifeguard
arrived. Thereafter, a paramedic from the Aqua Dome emergency
services arrived. Mr. B[...] was asked to write a report. He
testified that he wrote the report even though his wife did not tell
him what happened as she was in pain, and being attended to.
[11]
The plaintiff was thereafter taken to hospital where she received
medical attention, including an operation. The plaintiff’s
testified that on her arrival at Emfuleni hospital, before being
transferred to Sunward Park hospital, she was seen by an orthopaedic
surgeon who pushed her ankle into position. She further testified
that she was under a lot of pain. The doctors fitted her with
a
plaster of Paris (cast) in her right foot. She remained in hospital
until 28 December 2018, whereafter she went for follow up
visits at
which the doctor put in a plate and six screws. She had the cast
until March 2019.
[12]
During cross examination, the plaintiff conceded that she does not
know what caused her to stumble and fall.
[13]
With regard to the incident, Mr B[...] testified that he found the
plaintiff lying in an awkward position on the grass
between the
barrel and the bench and table. She was holding her own head and leg
up and was in shock and in a lot of pain. Her
feet were close to the
wooden beam. He does not know what happened to her or what caused her
to fall.
[14]
He testified that the plaintiff’s ankle was completely
dislocated. Notably, Mr B[...] testified that he did not
see the
plaintiff fall, but figured out what could have happened. He assessed
the situation and realised that there were a lot
of people around
him. He also noticed that there was a lot of items lying around on
the grass and next to the tables all around
him, including shoes,
handbags and other items. He stated that he explained that the
plaintiff stumbled over clothing / towel when
she was approaching the
stairs. It is on this basis that he concluded that his wife stumbled
over clothing / towels when she was
approaching the stairs. On the
same assumption, he completed the incident questionnaire and recorded
his assumptions, He conceded
under cross examination that his
conclusion was based on speculation.
[15]
It is common cause that Mr B[...] returned to the resort after the
incident and took photographs of specific areas. He
testified that
this was with a view of showing what he saw as an unsafe environment
and an unsafe walkway at the resort.
Absolution
[16]
At the
close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant applied for
absolution. The defendant contends that the essence of the
difficulty
facing the plaintiff is that she does not know what caused her fall.
The defendant relied on the decision of the erstwhile
Appellate
Division in
Claude
Neon Lights
[1]
for the
proposition that what the court is required to establish at this
stage of the proceedings is not whether the evidence establishes
what
would finally be established, but whether there is evidence upon
which a court, applying its mind reasonably could or might
(not
should nor ought to) find for the plaintiff.
[17]
Mr De Beer argued on behalf of the defendant that there is no
evidence for this court to apply its mind to, on the basis
that the
plaintiff has failed to discharge the onus which rests on her, to
prove all the elements of a delictual claim, being (i)
an act/
omission, (ii) which is wrongful, (iii) negligence (iv) causation and
(v) damages. In other words there must be a wrongful
and negligent
act or omission which caused the plaintiff to fall and suffered
damages.
[18]
He further
submitted that for purposes of liability,
culpa
would only arise if a reasonable person in the position of the
defendant would foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct
injuring another in his person or property, and causing him
patrimonial loss, and would take such steps to guard against such
occurrence, but fails to take such steps.
[2]
Mr De Beer further submitted that in the present case the evidence is
simply that ‘the plaintiff was walking, there were
a lot of
people, she tripped and she fell.’ Even though one might argue
that the minimum evidence of the plaintiff is required,
in this case
the plaintiff does not know what caused her to fall and conceded as
much, including that that she might have tripped
over someone else’s
foot, counsel further submitted.
[19]
He argued
that the plaintiff wants this court to draw an inference that she
fell over something that was left on the ground when
she has not
provided any evidence to that effect, and thus requires the court to
speculate. Counsel cited
S
v Cooper
[3]
where the court held that inferential reasoning requires facts and
cannot amount to speculation. He pointed out that in the present
case
there are no facts, and that the case is exacerbated by the fact that
the plaintiff’s letter of demand and her particulars
of claim
do not speak to each other.
[20]
With
reference to evidence of something on the floor, counsel referred to
the decision in
Monteoli
v Woolworths (Pty) Ltd
[4]
where
the court noted that:
“
[37] It
seems to me that in the context of a supermarket or something
similar, before the
presence of produce such as green beans on the floor can give
rise to an inference of negligence, there
must be some evidence of
either a direct or circumstantial nature that the defendant at the
time of the accident:
(i)
ought
to have taken steps to prevent the presence of beans on the floor
from occurring; alternatively,
(ii)
knew; or
(iii)
ought to have been aware of their presence; and
(iv)
failed to take reasonable steps to remove the offending items
forthwith.
[21]
Mr. De Beer stated, correctly in my view that there is no evidence of
something that was on the floor, causing the plaintiff
to trip, and
consequently, there is no
prima facie
case to shift the
evidentiary burden to the defendant.
[22]
As stated
in
Prinsloo
v Barnyard
[5]
,
“
People negotiate
all kinds of stairs and obstacles in everyday life without falling.
Sometimes they stumble and fall where there
are no obstacles, even in
their own homes. It cannot be expected of owners of property to
protect the public against their own
inattentiveness or possible
clumsiness.
[6]
[23]
Counsel further relied on the above extract, stating that while Mr.
B[...] navigated through the same path in a hurry,
he did not suffer
the same fate as his wife, and that Mrs. B[...] cannot explain what
caused her injury or what she tripped or
slipped on.
[24]
Lastly,
counsel submitted that “where a plaintiff does not prove the
cause of her injury she cannot succeed in an action against
the
defendants for negligently causing her loss.”
[7]
He drew similarities between
Ramafamba
and the
present case that the plaintiff did not discharge the onus of proving
that the defendants had caused her injury.
[25]
In the absence of any evidence as to what the plaintiff fell over,
the defendant submitted that there can be no basis
for alleging that
the defendant ought to have guarded against it, he added. There is no
inference to draw as Ms B[...] might have
fallen over a towel, a
rucksack, someone else’s feet, a bench or a block, because it
could have been anything.
[26]
On these grounds, he submitted that absolution should be granted with
costs on Scale B.
[27]
Mr Motala agreed on the test to be applied in considering whether or
not the court should grant absolution. He however
argued that it is
not correct to suggest that there is no evidence on which this court
could or might find for the plaintiff. He
conceded that the
particulars of claim as they stand do not tie in with the evidence of
the plaintiff as to what caused her to
fall. He submitted that the
plaintiff was candid that she does not know what caused her to fall
but was adamant that she fell over
an item on the floor.
[28]
He challenged the fact that nobody else fell there, the question is
whether there ought to have been items on the floor
in the first
place. That the defendant should provide evidence as to what steps it
took to avoid harm. I do not agree with this
proposition. What the
plaintiff suggests is that the defendant should have foreseen the
possibility of someone leaving an item
on the ground that would cause
another to trip and fall. Moreover, the plaintiff’s own
evidence is that she did not see what
caused her to fall.
[29]
Mr Motala argued that it could not be expected of the plaintiff
having stated that there were various items on the ground
to specify
what specific item she tripped over. It would be sufficient for to
state that there were items left there which should
not have been
there in the first place. The difficulty with this contention is what
case should the defendant prepare for?
[30]
In this regard, it was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that the
defendant
pleaded
specifically in amplification of its denial and cannot aver that they
have no case to answer to, or do not know what to
plead to. They have
pleaded specifically as to what caused the plaintiff to fall. The
plaintiff has identified an obligation for
the defendant to ensure
that the area was kept in a safe condition, and that the defendant
failed to do so. Her case is that she
tripped and fell over an item
she did not see. With regard to the walkways, the answer is that the
benches were protruding onto
the walkway causing it to narrow down.
Although the particulars of claim state that the plaintiff fell over
a wooden beam this
should be considered holistically, counsel further
submitted.
[31]
There is no dispute that the plaintiff tendered two contradictory
versions, first in the particulars of claim, and secondly
in her
evidence before this Court. The two versions are irreconcilable, for
the plaintiff could have either tripped and fallen
over an item that
was on the floor, or a wooden beam that was protruding. Having
pleaded to the particulars of claim, the defendant
was faced with a
different version at the trial. That the defendant had pleaded to the
particulars of claim, in my view, does not
assist the plaintiff.
[32]
Relying on
the judgment of the Appellate Division in
Regal
v Superslate
[8]
,
Mr
Motala submitted that control over the maintenance of a building is
an important consideration in establishing whether the defendant’s
omission amounts to unlawful conduct.
[33]
The real question is whether in these circumstances, it could be said
that the defendant is the cause of the plaintiff’s
injuries.
What did the defendant leave or allow to be left on the floor which
caused the plaintiff to fall? This is the question
to be answered by
the plaintiff. She did not. To the contrary, Mr B[...] testified that
to this day, there is still confusion as
to what caused the plaintiff
to fall.
[34]
As Mr De Beer argued, correctly in my view, the plaintiff could have
tripped over her own foot, someone else’s
foot, and perhaps due
to her own inattentiveness, did not notice it. The danger with
this kind of approach is that it leaves
the court to speculate as to
what caused the plaintiff’s fall. If it was someone else’s
foot, was the defendant required
to guard against that occurrence? If
it was a bag, a towel or any other item, was the defendant expect to
prevent such occurrence?
It appears to me that the observation by Mr
B[...] of various items lying on the ground was in any event, after
the fact, while
trying to piece together the events which might have
led to his wife’s fall. The truth of the matter is that no one
knows
what caused the plaintiff’s fall. Not even the plaintiff
herself. This is not sufficient to discharge the onus which rests
on
the plaintiff. Consequently, the report provided by Mr. B[...] is
without basis and by his own admission, mere speculation.
[35]
Was
there evidence led on behalf of the plaintiff,
assuming
it were true, upon which a court acting reasonably, might give
judgment against the defendant. In other words, “whether
a
court, if no further evidence was led, after reasonable application
of its mind, might find in favour of the plaintiff”
[9]
.
I think not.
[36]
It follows therefore that the application should succeed, and
absolution granted. I am not oblivious to the fact that
absolution is
a stringent remedy and should be granted sparingly, as it goes
against the principle of
audi alteram partem
. I do not make
light of this. However, in the facts of this case and the evidence
adduced by the plaintiff’s witnesses, there
is no evidence upon
which this Court could or might find for the plaintiff.
[37]
In the result, I make the following order:
a. Merits and
quantum are separated, and the issue of quantum is postponed
sine
die
.
b. Absolution from
the instance is granted with costs on scale B.
S
MFENYANA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
For
the plaintiff:
N Motala instructed by Clark Attorneys
paula@clarkattorneys.co.za
For
the defendant: WA de
Beer instructed by Whalley & Van der Lith Inc.
barry@wvl.co.za
/
leigh@wvl.co.za
Date
of hearing.:
17 - 20 February 2025
Date
of judgment: 26
May 2025
[1]
Claude
Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel
1976
(4) SA 403 (A).
[2]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966 (2) All SA 490 (A).
[3]
S v
Cooper and Others
[1976] 3 All SA 253 (T).
[4]
(A5042/99)
[2000] ZAGPHC 4
(21 August 2000).
[5]
(27705/06) [2009] ZAGPPHC 105 (4 September 2009).
[6]
Para 16.
[7]
(517/2012)
[2012] ZASCA 162
(19 November 2012).
[8]
1962
(3) SA 18 (A).
[9]
De
Klerk v ABSA Ltd and Others
2003 (4) SA 315
(SCA)
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