Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 635South Africa
Langson v Road Accident Fund (20132/21) [2025] ZAGPJHC 635 (20 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Langson v Road Accident Fund (20132/21) [2025] ZAGPJHC 635 (20 June 2025)
Langson v Road Accident Fund (20132/21) [2025] ZAGPJHC 635 (20 June 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
20132/21
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
20/06/2025
In
the matter between:
SANGA
LANGSON
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
LINK
NO: 5053503
JUDGEMENT
NTHAMBELENI
AJ
BACKGROUND
OF THE ACTION
1.
This is a personal injury claim action that was before me on the 30
th
of May 2025 and appeared on the roll as matter no 39. In this matter,
both merits and quantum were still in dispute and the matter
proceeded on an unopposed basis as there was no settlement between
the parties. The claim is in terms of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56
of 1996
as amended.
2.
The
Defendant’s defence was struck out by the order of my brother
the Honourable Justice Mabesela J on 11 December 2024.
[1]
There was no one appearing for the Defendant in court and the matter
proceeded on that basis before me.
3.
The notice
of set down for this matter to proceed on Tuesday, May 2025 was
served by hand on the Defendant on 22 April 2025 and
uploaded on
caselines.
[2]
APPLICATION
IN TERMS OF
RULE 38(2)
4.
The
application to present evidence of the Plaintiff and his expert
witnesses, and any other relevant witness by way of affidavit
in
terms of Rule 38(2) of the Uniform Rules was sought and granted as
per prayer to of my draft order.
[3]
THE
MERITS
5.
Counsel for the Plaintiff dealt with the merits and presented
evidence in line with the merits bundle
that appears in section 022
on caselines. The bundle is comprised of the copies of the
Plaintiff’s passport that appear on
caselines at 022-1,
driver’s license at 022-2 to 022-3, affidavit deposed by the
Plaintiff on 22 April 2025 at 022-5 to 022-9,
consent form dated the
22 April 2025 at 022-10, pictures taken at the scene of the accident
22 April 2025 at 022-11 to 022-14.
6.
In support
of the evidence on merits, counsel presented two authorities in
support being the matters of
Sieborger
v South African Railways of Harbours
[4]
as well as
Southern
Insurance Association Ltd v Cogill & Another
.
[5]
7.
Based on those submissions and the absence of any evidence from the
Defendant, I awarded merits 100%
in favour of the Plaintiff in the
action.
THE
PLAINTIFF INJURIES AND QUANTUM
8.
According
to the Helen Joseph Hospital records; under provisional diagnosis,
the Plaintiff suffers a right and midshaft femur; the
date of
discharge was recorded as 04/01/19 R midshaft femur.
[6]
Further and according to the Hospital records, the following is
recorded:
Accident 27 December
2018; Clinical findings: HR 69, BP 122/78 SATS 99
-
Airway self-maintained
-
Breathing clear
-
Circulation normal heart sound
-
C-spine clear
-
Small abrasions on the face
-
R shoulder small 1 cm laceration
-
Abdomen soft-non-tender
-
Pelvis stable
-
R leg shortened plus deformed- obvious fracture midshaft,
neurovascular intact.
-
X-ray midshaft femur fracture,
normal CT Brain
+ Spine, CT angiogram
-
Treatment…………...nail R Femur;
9.
The above injuries accord with the Road Accident Fund’s
acceptance letter on General Damages dated
07 September 2023, which
records the following; “
Claimant sustained a right midshaft
femur fracture, a laceration of the right shoulder and small
abrasions on the face. The patient
has been left with disfigurement
scarring which will benefit from surgical revision. The patient has
been left with serious permanent
disfigurement as a result of the
accident”
The
RAF 4 form by Dr. Leslie Berkowitz Orthopaedic Surgeon is therefore
accepted in terms of
Regulation 3(3)
(C) and (d) of the
Road Accident
Fund Amendment Act 19 of 2005
. The letter was signed by one Mr
Hangwani Mutavhatsindi acting for the Road Accident Fund
.
10.
On
the Plaintiff’s heads of arguments,
[7]
the following were recorded as injuries that were sustained by the
Plaintiff; a mild traumatic brain injury, a fracture of the
left
maxilla bone, a right femur midshaft fracture, severe scarring on the
right leg, abrasions on the face, lacerations on the
right shoulder,
PSTD, depression and anxiety see Dr Read’s report, paragraph 1
at 008-9 to 008-10 caselines, Prof Kelly’s
report A(ii) at page
008-52; caselines Prof Berkowitz’s report paragraph 4.2 at
008-27.
11.
The
Plaintiff’s Orthopaedic Surgeon Dr Read recorded the following
injuries sustained by the Plaintiff “
in
paragraph 1 of his report under the heading “history of the
accident
[8]
”
(a) The patient, Mr
Langison Sanga, was the driver of a motorbike which was involved in
an accident three years ago on 27 December
2018;
(b) following the
impact, the patient was taken by ambulance to Helen Joseph Hospital,
where he remained for approximately 8 days;
(c) According to the
RAF1 form signed by Dr. J.N Ndove and the available medical records,
the patient sustained the following injuries
in this accident:
(i) A right
midshaft femur fracture radiological investigation done at the time
of hospital admission showed a right commuted midshaft
femur fracture
with adjacent soft tissue oedema and haematoma formation. No acute
vascular injury was noted. The fracture was managed
surgically with
intramedullary nailing. The patient mobilised with crutches for a
period of 1-month post-accident. The Orthopaedic
hardware remains in
situ.
(ii) Non-Orthopaedic
Injuries
2. A head injury and a
small scalp laceration and a facial fracture. The patient was
admitted for neurological observations; his
Glascow Coma Scale was
15/15. A CT brain scan showed no acute intracranial pathology. A left
maxillary fracture was noted involving
the alveolar ridge”
12.
It is important at this juncture to state that Defendant has
not appointed any single expert to assess the alleged injuries
and
their extent as noted and recorded by Plaintiff’s experts in
this matter.
13.
The Plaintiff obtained seven (7) medico-legal reports to evaluate his
injuries, treatment,
and damages in Dr Read (Orthopaedic Surgeon),
Professor Kelly (Neurosurgeon), Dr Berkowitz (Plastic and
Reconstructive Surgeon),
Ms Prinsloo (Neuropsychologist), Ms
Kaseberg, Ms Rubenstein (Occupational Therapist), Ms Du Toit
(Industrial Psychologist) as well
as Mr Loots (Actuary).
14.
In cases of this nature, it is important for the Defendant to
appoint their own experts to counter the Plaintiff’s
expert
testimony and in this matter, none was appointed to counter seven (7)
of the Plaintiff’s experts. There is no doubt
that under these
circumstances the Plaintiff’s experts will prevail against the
Defendant.
15.
The
Plaintiff’s counsel summarized the evidence of all the experts
in his Heads of Arguments in brief
[9]
.
There were no past hospital expenses as the Plaintiff was treated at
Helen Joseph Hospital which is a Government Hospital.
[10]
The future medical expenses are covered through an undertaking that
is 100 % in favour of the Plaintiff and incorporated under
prayer 6
of the draft order of this Court.
LOSS
OF EARNING CAPACITY OF THE PLAINTIFF
16.
In relation to this head damages reliance was placed upon the
evidence of Ms Kaseberg, Ms Rubenstein (Occupational Therapist),
Ms
Du Toit (Industrial Psychologist) as well as Mr Loots (Actuary).
17.
Both
the Occupational and the Industrial have classified the Plaintiff as
a vulnerable employee compared to his peers in the
open labour market
and have classified him as a disadvantaged job seeker.
[11]
18.
The
Actuary Mr. Loots has applied a 30% contingency having regard to the
accident which represents a 15% differential. Based
on authorities in
Shield
Ins Co Ltd v Booyen
[12]
,
Phalane
v RAF
[13]
read
together with
AA
Mutual Ins CO v Van Jaarsveld as reported in Corbett & Buchanan;
The
Quantum of damaged, Volume 360 at 367. The recommended contingency
applied by the Actuary is acceptable to this court.
19.
Mr. Loots also applied a 15% contingency deduction to the
calculation disregarding the accident, this despite being higher
than
indicated applying the Koch method is reasonable considering the
uncertainties of the plaintiff’s employment.
20.
Therefore, the total loss of earnings as per the Plaintiff’s
actuary is a total of R
155,537,00 [One Hundred and Fifty-Five, Five Hundred and Thirty-Seven
Thousand Rands.
GENERAL
DAMAGES
21.
The injuries sustained by the Plaintiff in this matter are recorded
in the medical records that appear under bundle 023-medical
records
on caselines. I have already recorded the injuries sustained by the
Plaintiff according to the Hospital records from Helen
Joseph
Hospital where he was treated.
22.
During his submission on general damages, Counsel for the
Plaintiff rightfully conceded that General Damages are at the
discretion of the court. However, he made submissions for an award
for General Damages in the following manner:
“
In
considering the number of general damages, consideration has to
be
given to the fact that the plaintiff has suffered a mild traumatic
brain injury, a fractured femur, and severe disfiguring
scarring
[14]
”.
23.
The
Plaintiff’s Counsel submitted several case laws to justify the
amount of 1,5 million for General Damages in this
matter
[15]
in the heads of arguments to justify a bloated figure of general
damages in the total amount of 1,5 million rands
[
One Million, Five Hundred Thousand Rands].
24.
Based on the injuries sustained by the plaintiff in the
accident, I awarded an amount of R 650 000,00 [ Six Hundred
and
Fifty Thousand] for general damages. I will demonstrate further
reasons and legal basis as to why the amount of R 650 000,00
is
appropriate in my analysis below.
ANALYSIS
25.
Despite what is presented as the case and injuries of the
plaintiff, it is important to note further that this court is
not a
rubber stamp of amounts being presented by the Plaintiff to support
their case even though their matters is undefended by
the Road
Accident Fund.
26.
The
Court considers the total evidence presented to sustain the claims
brought by the Plaintiff in any action. In matters
of this nature
where the defendant did not oppose the claim, the court is even
extra-cautious to avoid being used as a rubberstamp
of the
plaintiff’s claims. The Road Accident Fund is not a largesse as
stated in
Pitt
v Economic Insurance Co. Ltd
[16]
where the following was stated:
“
The courts must take
care to see that its awards are fair to both sides-it must give just
compensation to the plaintiff, but it
must not pour out largesse from
the horn of plentily at the defendant’s expense”.
COMPARABLE
AWARDS
27.
In
Sandler
v Wholesale Coal Supplies Ltd
[17]
,
Watermeyer
JA held
:
“ the amount to be compensation awarded as can only be
determined by the broadest general consideration and the figure
arrived at must necessarily be uncertain, depending on the Judge’s
view of what is fair in all circumstances of the case”
.
28.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has stated in
Protea
Assurance Co
Ltd v
Lamb
[18]
;
“
Comparable
cases, when available, should rather be used to afford some guidance,
in a general way, towards assisting the Court in
arriving at an award
which is not substantially out of general accord with previous awards
which can be used as a yardstick. The
court in these cases has
discretion”.
29.
When
examining
comparable
cases, the court must not be parrotlike in following them but must be
mindful of the fact that the cases serve as a guide.
This much was
stated in
Protea
Assurance Co. Ltd v Lamb.
[19]
“
Comparable
cases, when available, should rather be used to afford some guidance,
in a general way, towards assisting the Court in
arriving at an award
which is not substantially out of general accord with previous awards
in broadly similar cases, regard being
had to all the factors which
are considered to be relevant in the assessment of general damages.
At the same time, it may be permissible,
in an appropriate case, to
test any assessment arrived at upon this basis by reference to the
general pattern of previous awards
in cases where the injuries and
their sequelae may have been either more serious or less
than those in the case under
consideration”.
30.
In
the case of
Dikeni
v Road Accident Fund
[20]
Van Heerden J stated: “
Although
these cases have been of assistance, it is trite law that each case
must be adjudicated, on its own merit. No one case
is factually the
same as the other. It only provides a guide in the assessment of
damages.”
31.
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour
[21]
, the
court held:
“
The
assessment of awards of general damages with reference to awards made
in previous cases is fraught with difficulty. The facts
of a
particular case need to be looked at as a whole and few cases are
directly comparable. They are a useful guide to what other
courts
have considered to be appropriate, but they have no higher value than
that.”
32.
In
Peter
v Road Accident Fund
[22]
:
In
this case, the Plaintiff suffered major injuries including a fracture
of the pelvis and acetabulum. Furthermore, he suffered
two scalp
lacerations and what was described as multiple deep abrasions to the
right shoulder and upper arm and over the lumbar
spine. This left him
with some marked scarring on the right arm for which plastic surgery
could achieve a 50% improvement. The
R180 000.00 General Damages
translates to some R 565 000.00 in current terms.
33.
In
Union
and South West Africa Insurance Co Ltd v Humphrey
[23]
,
A 15-year-old girl, injured while riding a pillion on a motorcycle,
sustained fractures to the tibia and metatarsals, along with
severe
scarring to her lower leg. In addition to orthopaedic interventions,
she underwent further surgeries, including one for
skin grafting. The
scarring on her foot was described as a definite cosmetic blemish.
The award for general damages of R8 500.00
at the time
translates to approximately R374 000.00 in 2024.
34.
Recently,
in the matter of
De
Meyer v Road Accident Fund
[24]
, t
he
Full Court of this Division addressed the issue of general damages in
relation to disfigurement. In that case, the court
held that the
plaintiff would possibly require surgery due to the disfigurement of
the foot.
The court awarded a sum of R325 000.00 for General Damages.
35.
Therefore,
the award of General Damages for R650 000,00 accords with the
injuries that were sustained by the Plaintiff
in this case and
the suggested amount by the Plaintiff of R1,5 million is therefore
unjustifiable and unsustainable in the circumstances
of the case
before this court, in that the Plaintiff’s own neurosurgeon Dr.
A Kelly
[25]
as well as Dr.
Berkowitz the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon at 008-26 of his
report under history where it was recorded under
history, that the
Plaintiff sustained; “
1.1
Mr. Sanga was involved in a motorcycle accident on the 27 December
2018; 1.2 The following injuries were sustained; 1.2.1 Small
abrasions on the face; 1.2.2 A laceration of the right shoulder;
1.2.3 A fracture of the right femur.”
The
Neurosurgeon also confirmed that his recorded Glascow Coma Scale was
15/15 on admission.
COSTS
36.
It is
trite that the award of costs falls within the discretion of this
Court.
Rule 67A(3)
which came to effect on 12 April 2024, requires
that the Counsel’s fee in the context of a party-and-party
costs in the High
Court be awarded on scale A, B, or C as the case
may be. This amendment applies prospectively in relation to work done
on a matter
after 12 April 2024.
Rule 67A
addresses itself only to
awards of costs as between party and party with the purpose to
exercise control over the rate at which
Counsel’s fees can be
recovered under such award
[26]
.
37.
Rule 67A
(3) (b), in relation to the scale of Counsel’s
fees, refers to considerations which may include the complexity of
the matter,
the value of the claim, and the importance of the relief
sought. This is clearly not an exhaustive list but it is used as a
guiding
tool in the award of costs.
38.
Similarly in this case the costs are at the discretion of this
Court and in this matter, I awarded the costs in scale
B.
This
matter is neither complex nor are the papers voluminous, and the
amount involved is not substantial relative to the overall
context.
Counsel’s request for scale C is unmeritorious.
ORDER
39.
The order of this court is as attached on Caseslines at 010-6 and is
annexed to this judgment.
RR NTHAMBELENI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
HEARD:
29 MAY 2025
DELIVERED ON: 20 JUNE
2025
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL FOR THE
PLAINTIFF: Mr.
SEAN MULLIGAN
INSTRUCTED: LEVIN TATANIS
INC
ATTORNEYS FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
REF
: Ms. I
Hassalonidis L383
COUNSEL FOR THE FIRST
DEFENDANT:
NO APPEARANCE
Instructed: Road Accident
Fund
REF
:
502/12818720/304/1
LINK NO
: 5053503
[1]
See
pages 012-3 to 012-4 on Caselines.
[2]
See
Notice of Set Down at pages 026-1 to 026-6 on Caselines.
[3]
See
Draft Order dated the 30
th
May 2025; Nthambeleni AJ on Caselines at pages 010-11 to 010-14.
[4]
1961(1)
SA 498(A) at 504 G-H
[5]
1978(4)
SA 128 (A) at 135 G-H
[6]
See
Caselines 023-1 to 023-23 Medical Records from Helen Joseph
Hospital.
[7]
See
paragraph 7 under the heading quantum on page 7 of the Heads of
Arguments at 028-7.
[8]
See Medico Legal Report of Dr Read at page 008-9 on Caselines.
[9]
See
heading: Brief Summary of the Plaintiff’s Expert Witnesses at
028-10 to 028-42
[10]
See
paragraph 38 of Plaintiff’s Heads of Arguments at page 42.
[11]
See
paragraph 40; 40.1 of Plaintiff’s Heads of Arguments at
028-43.
[12]
1979
(3) SA 953
(A) at 965 G-H.
[13]
481121
(2014) (2017) ZAGPPHC 759 7 November 2017.
[14]
See
page 028-47 of the Plaintiff’s Heads of Arguments under
paragraph 44.1.
[15]
See Plaintiff’s Heads of Arguments on pocket 028 pages 028-48
to 028-49
[16]
1957(3)SA
284 (D) at 287 E-F.
[17]
1941 AD194 at 199.
[18]
1971(1) SA 530 AD at p535 H-536A
[19]
Protea
Assurance Co. Ltd v Lamb
1971
(1) SA 530
(A)
(“Protea Assurance”) at para 534H – 535A
[20]
Dikeni
v RAF 2002 (5) 171 GP
[21]
[2006]
ZASCA 71
;
2006
(6) SA 320
(SCA)
at para 17
[22]
2003
(5F3) QOD 9 (BHC)
[23]
1979
(3E5) QOD 58 (A)
[24]
[2025]
ZAGPPHC 307
[25]
Dr A Kelly see 008-65 of the Neurosurgeon’s Report on
Caselines.
[26]
See
the discussion in Wanga v Road Accident Fund: 4503/2021; Unreported
judgement of the Western Cape High Court per Adams AJ
delivered on
19 November 2024 at paras 7-11.
sino noindex
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