Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 175South Africa
L.Z.D obo T. K v Road Accident Fund (A2023-0691885) [2024] ZAGPJHC 175 (23 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
23 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Motor accident – Quantum for alleged injuries - facts to be proven for expert evidence to be relevant – expert evidence based on assumption of unproved head injury.
Judgment
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## L.Z.D obo T. K v Road Accident Fund (A2023-0691885) [2024] ZAGPJHC 175 (23 February 2024)
L.Z.D obo T. K v Road Accident Fund (A2023-0691885) [2024] ZAGPJHC 175 (23 February 2024)
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sino date 23 February 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.
NOT
REPORTABLE
2.
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
23
February 2024
CASE
NUMBER
:
A2023-0691885
Court
a quo
case:
2021/50120
In the appeal between:
L[…] Z[…]
D[…]
obo
T[…] K[…]
[…]
Appellant
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Respondent
(RAF link 38997232)
Neutral
Citation
:
Coram:
Wright J, Maier-Frawley J, Turner AJ
Heard
:
7 February 2024
Delivered:
23 February 2023
– This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 23 February 2023.
Summary:
Motor accident – Quantum for alleged injuries - facts to
be proven for expert evidence to be relevant
– expert evidence
based on assumption of unproved head injury.
.
ORDER
On
appeal from the High Court, Johannesburg (per Mazibuko AJ):
:
(1)
The appeal is dismissed with costs
.
JUDGMENT
Turner AJ (Maier-Frawley
J concurring)
[1]
On 3 May 2016, a motor vehicle collision
occurred on Usasa Street, Protea Glen, Soweto (“the collision”)
involving a
motor vehicle and a six year old pedestrian, DTK. After
the collision, DTK was taken to the Bheki Mlangeni Hospital and the
diagnosis
and treatment she received was recorded in the hospital
file.
[2]
In October 2021, DTK’s mother (“the
plaintiff”) instituted action against the Road Accident Fund
(“RAF”)
for damages flowing from the injuries sustained
by DTK in the collision. In the original particulars of claim, the
following allegations
were made:
“
8.
As the direct result of the aforementioned motor vehicle accident,
the plaintiff’s minor child was then rushed to
Bheki Mlangeni
Hospital receiving emergency medical attention due to the following
serious bodily injuries she sustained :
8.1 Head injury;
8.2 Greenstick
fracture of the distal right tibia / fibula;
8..3 Various
bruises, abrasions, contusions;
8.4 Lacerations;
8.5 Soft tissue
injuries.
9. As the direct
result of the aforementioned serious bodily injuries sustained by the
plaintiff’s minor child, the
Plaintiff’s minor child has
been left with a permanent bodily disfigurement and/or disability in
that he can no longer mobilise
and/or utilise his body to the fullest
as he used to before the motor vehicle accident occurred.
9.1 The
plaintiff’s minor child has lost her full and perfect use as
well as enjoyment of her entire body due to the
aforementioned
injuries;
9.2 The
plaintiff’s minor child’s Constitutional rights to
freedom of movement has been infringed and/or limited
by the
afore-said injuries in that he is no longer able to walk for a long
distance;
9.3 The
plaintiff’s minor child is always suffering from unbearable
bodily pains and residual moderate neuro-cognitive
deficits (in the
form of memory impairment) due to the aforesaid motor vehicle
accident which left him with permanent bodily disfigurement;
9.4 The
plaintiff’s minor child’s rights to enter a trade of her
choice and earn a good living has been destroyed
by the aforesaid
motor vehicle accident as she now suffers from low
concentration.
10. Quantum
As the direct result of
the aforementioned serious bodily injuries sustained in the aforesaid
motor vehicle, the plaintiff’s
damages are constituted as
follows:
10.1 General
damages in the sum of R1,000,000 (one million Rands);
10.2 Future
medical expenses in the sum of R600,000 (six hundred thousand Rands)
...”
[3]
Prior to the trial set down for 17 January
2023, the RAF admitted the liability of the insured driver for the
collision. The
RAF also provided an undertaking to cover all of
DTK’s future medical costs flowing from the collision and the
issue of general
damages was postponed to be determined outside of
this Court.
[4]
A few days before trial, the plaintiff
delivered a notice to amend the particulars of claim to introduce a
further head of damage,
being loss of future income and earning
capacity, in the amount of R7,992,904.00. This amendment was
granted at the start
of the trial. It appears that the
amendment was granted because the plaintiff had delivered expert
reports a number of months
before the trial motivating the case for
this head of damage but, through an oversight, had not amended the
pleading.
The amendment reflected the conclusions reached
in the expert reports.
[5]
The trial ran from 17 to 19 January 2023
before Mazibuko AJ with the only questions to be determined being
whether the plaintiff
was entitled to payment of damages for loss of
future income and earning capacity and if so, in what amount. In a
written judgment
delivered on 14 April 2023, the Court a quo
dismissed the claim for loss of earnings.
[6]
The plaintiff appeals against the whole of
the order, with leave to appeal having been granted by the Court
a
quo
in a written judgment dated 21 June
2023.
[7]
To
succeed in a delictual claim flowing from bodily injury sustained in
a motor collision, a plaintiff must prove at least the following:
that there was a motor collision; that the defendant was at fault in
causing the collision; that the plaintiff suffered injuries
in the
collision and that such injuries and
sequelae
(effects or consequences of the injuries) were caused by the
defendant’s fault; the quantification of the financial
compensation
payable flowing from the injuries so sustained in the
collision caused by the defendant’s fault.
[1]
The plaintiff bears the onus of proving each of the relevant facts
from which these conclusions can be drawn, on a balance of
probabilities.
[8]
In the current case, the collision, the
involvement of DTK in the collision and the liability of the insured
driver for the collision
were all admitted by the RAF. However, the
nature and extent of the injuries sustained by DTK in the accident
were not admitted
and the RAF put the plaintiff to the proof of those
injuries. The quantum of the damages alleged to have been suffered as
a result
of the injuries sustained in the collision was also
disputed.
[9]
In presenting its case on these remaining
issues, the plaintiff relied only on expert evidence presented
through a number
of expert witnesses : Dr JA Azhar, a Neurosurgeon;
Mr Talent Maturure, an Industrial Psychologist; Ms D Mathebula, an
Occupational
Therapist; Dr Z Radebe, a Clinical Psychologist; Dr
Yvonne Matlala, an Educational Psychologist, Dr MJ Tladi, an
Orthopaedic Surgeon,
Drs Mkhabela & lndunah, Diagnostic
Radiologists; and John Sauer an Actuary. Each of the medical
experts examined DTK
during the second half of 2021 and most of them
prepared their reports with reference to input received from the
plaintiff and
the reports of others who had examined DTK. All of
their reports were directed at describing the impaired mental ability
of the
plaintiff, with the central premise of their evidence being
that DTK had suffered a head injury in the collision leading to this
impairment.
[10]
The plaintiff did not lead any factual
evidence and the defendant closed its case without leading any
evidence.
[11]
At the conclusion of the trial, the RAF’s
counsel argued that the plaintiff had not proven that a head injury
was sustained
by DTK in the collision and so had not established the
factual premise for the expert testimony presented to the court to
impose
liability on the RAF for the loss of income arising from an
alleged head injury. The Court
a quo
accepted these arguments, finding that the evidence placed before the
Court by the plaintiff, including the hospital records, did
not
establish that a head injury was sustained by DTK in the collision.
[12]
The
RAF’s approach relies on the principles confirmed by the SCA in
S
eptoo
[2]
that
the RAF is only liable for damages that are proved to flow from
injuries sustained due to the driving of a motor vehicle:
“
Section
3 of the Act [Road accident Fund Act 56 of 1996] stipulates that:
‘
The
object of the Fund shall be the payment of compensation in accordance
with this Act for loss or damage wrongfully caused by
the driving of
motor vehicles.’
The
underlying basis for the Act is the common law
principles of the law of delict. A claimant must therefore prove all
the elements
of a delict before it can succeed with its claim in
terms of the Act.”
[13]
On appeal, the plaintiff’s primary
contention is that the Court
a quo
“
erred in admitting and relying on
the hospital records
”
. The
plaintiff argues that the contents of the hospital records were never
proven, that they constituted inadmissible hearsay and
consequently
ought not to have been relied upon. The plaintiff contends that the
contents of the hospital records should be ignored
(as inadmissible
hearsay) and the Court should rely on the opinion evidence of Dr
Azhar, the neurosurgeon called by the plaintiff,
when determining
whether a head injury was sustained.
[14]
In his report, Dr Azhar states
inter
alia
that DTK may have suffered “a
contusion resulting in a minor head injury” and that the staff
at the Bheki Mlangeni hospital
probably missed the head injury on
examining DTK. Dr Azhar then goes on to explain the deficits
that may have resulted from
the assumed head injury. When
cross-examined at the trial, the record reveals that Dr Azhar was
unable to say that
a head injury had been sustained in the collision:
"MS MHLONGO: Yes,
would it be perhaps correct to state that this within this period
that would have lapsed there could have
potentially been any other
reason why the patient would have now at this stage when you saw her
being presenting with symptoms
of what you have referred to as a mild
head injury or concussion?
MR AZHAR: Sure it could
have been possible but I was going by the history given by the
mother."
[15]
The plaintiff’s claim for future loss
of earnings was based solely on DTK having sustained a head injury in
the collision,
in consequence whereof DTK now has cognitive deficits
that have resulted in a learning disability.
[16]
The other experts’ assessments all
depart from the premise that there was a head injury and that the
various learning challenges
experienced by DTK are a result of a head
injury sustained in the collision. The assessment of DTK’s
abilities and the quantification
of the damages claimed was
predicated on the factual presumptions that DTK did not present with
any of these difficulties prior
to 3 May 2016 and that they all
manifested as a result of a head injury suffered in the collision.
[17]
As
Wallis JA pointed out in
National
Potato Cooperative
[3]
the
primary principle in dealing with expert evidence is that “
before
any weight can be given to an expert’s opinion, the facts upon
which the opinion is based must be found to exist
.”
[4]
This followed the Learned Judge’s statement of the general
principles in paragraph 97:
“
Opinion
evidence is admissible ‘when the court can receive “appreciable
help” from that witness on the particular
issue’. That
will be when –
‘
By
reason of their special knowledge and skill, they are better
qualified to draw inferences than the trier of fact. There are some
subjects upon which the court is usually quite incapable of forming
an opinion unassisted, and others upon which it could come
to some
sort of independent conclusion, but the help of an expert would be
useful.’
“
As
to the nature of the expert’s opinion, in the same case,
Wessels JA said –
‘
An
expert’s opinion represents his reasoned conclusion based on
certain facts or data, which are either common cause, or established
by his own evidence or that of some other competent witness. Except
possibly where it is not controverted, an expert’s bald
statement of his opinion is not of any real assistance. Proper
evaluation of the opinion can only be undertaken if the process
of
reasoning which led to the conclusion, including the premises from
which the reasoning proceeds, are disclosed by the expert.’”
[5]
[18]
In
A
M and Another v MEC for Health, Western Cape
[6]
,
the SCA put it thus:
“
The
opinions of expert witnesses involve the drawing of inferences from
facts. The inferences must be reasonably capable of being
drawn from
those facts. If they are tenuous, or far-fetched, they cannot form
the foundation for the court to make any finding
of
fact. Furthermore, in any process of reasoning the drawing of
inferences from the facts must be based on admitted or proven
facts
and not matters of speculation. As Lord Wright said in his
speech in
Caswell v Powell Duffryn
Associated Collieries Ltd
: s ‘Inference
must be carefully distinguished from conjecture or speculation. There
can be no inference unless there are
objective facts from which to
infer the other facts which it is sought to establish … But if
there are no positive proved
facts from which the inference can be
made, the method of inference fails and what is left is mere
speculation or conjecture.”
[19]
Similar
statements have been made in the SCA in
RAF
V SM
[7]
and
MV
Pasquale
[8]
.
[20]
In the current matter, the only factual
evidence which exists to establish that DTK was injured at all on 3
May 2016 are the medical
records obtained from the Bheki Mlangeni
Hospital. No direct evidence was given by the plaintiff or any other
person who witnessed
any injury having been sustained on 3 May 2016.
The hospital records reflect an injury to the patient’s
right leg and
do not reflect any head injury. No application was made
to admit the hearsay evidence relied on in the expert reports and it
was
not suggested that the plaintiff or the driver (who appears from
the police statements to have been known to the plaintiff) were
unavailable to give evidence of the injuries sustained.
[21]
Further, as pointed out by the Court
a
quo
, when the plaintiff deposed to an
affidavit in support of DTK’s claim at an earlier stage of the
proceedings, the plaintiff
herself relied on the hospital records as
being the evidence relied on to prove the injuries. In that
affidavit, the plaintiff
recorded:
“
...
On the abovementioned date, she [DTK] was involved in a motor vehicle
accident. As a result he [sic] sustained serious bodily
injuries, the
other injuries on his body will be
confirmed
by the medical records attached herein
.”
[9]
(emphasis added)
[22]
Further, the experts called by the
plaintiff also referred to and relied on the hospital records
as being an accurate record
of the notes taken when DTK was examined
on 3 May 2016. The experts did not purport to rely on any
contemporaneous records other
than the hospital records.
[23]
In my view, there is a fundamental problem
with the plaintiff’s case. Whether the hospital records are
admitted into evidence
or not, there is no evidence in the record
that DTK suffered a head injury in the collision. The plaintiff
cannot succeed to recover
damages from the RAF purely on the opinion
evidence of experts who examined DTK five years after the collision
occurred, where
there is no factual evidence showing that a head
injury (on which all of their views rely) was actually sustained in
the collision.
[24]
All
of the expert reports refer to statements made to them (or to another
expert) by the plaintiff when recording the factual assumptions
underpinning their reports. None of the experts had any
personal knowledge of the injuries DTK suffered in the collision
and
none of the experts had any personal knowledge of DTK’s
abilities or the challenges she faced before the collision.
This is because, as the Supreme Court of Appeal has cautioned,
before
any weight can be given to an expert’s opinion, the facts upon
which the opinion is based must be found to exist. An
opinion based
on facts not in evidence has no value for the Court.
[10]
[25]
Section 3(1)
of the
Law of Evidence
Amendment Act, 45 of 1988
provides that hearsay evidence shall not be
admitted as evidence at criminal or civil proceedings, unless the
requirements of that
section are met. -No application was made at
trial to admit, as hearsay, the statements made by the plaintiff to
the experts (as
recorded in their reports) and so no weight can be
placed on those statements. As an aside, it seems unlikely that
such an
application could have succeeded in circumstances where the
plaintiff was available to give evidence and where there are
inconsistencies
between the versions recorded by the various experts
and with contemporaneous statements made to (and by) the police
investigators.
One example is the plaintiff’s
apparent report that DTK suffered a loss of consciousness at the
scene of the accident, which
is recorded by the orthopaedic surgeon
but
not
the neurosurgeon or any other expert. This type of inconsistency
undermines the value of the experts’ assumptions based on
hearsay, particularly where it is not alleged or proven that the
plaintiff was present when the accident occurred or that she
personally witnessed it.
[26]
Further, the learning challenges faced by
DTK, as recorded in the expert reports, are not challenges that could
be said to follow
exclusively from the collision. For example, the
experts record that they were told that DTK did not perform well at
school, particularly
in Grades 1 and 5, that she required learning
support and the assessments which the experts performed also indicate
that she may
have fewer employment options than might be available to
a typical child. These are consequences that could have arisen
through
multiple factors or causes completely unrelated to the
collision, including factors which could have existed before the
collision.
In the absence of direct factual evidence of
DTK’s abilities and attributes before the collision, it is not
possible
to conclude, on a balance of probabilities, that the
collision is causally connected to any of the difficulties identified
in the
experts’ respective assessments. This was also conceded
by Dr Azhar, as quoted above.
[27]
Having regard to all of the evidence in the
record, this Court cannot find that the Court
a
quo
erred in its judgment dismissing
the plaintiff’s claim for damages arising from the head injury.
There was no evidence before
that Court (nor is there such evidence
in the record before this court) to establish such a head injury and
no evidence to indicate
that DTK’s potential income before the
collision was any different from her potential income after the
collision. In
the absence of such factual evidence, no damages
calculated as allegedly flowing from a head injury can be awarded.
[28]
The experts confirmed that DTK would not
suffer any loss of earning capacity from the injury to her leg.
The entire claim
for loss of earning capacity is premised on DTK
having sustained a head injury in the collision and, where no such
head injury
was proved, no damages can be awarded.
[29]
We have had the benefit of reading the
dissenting judgment by Wright J. Regrettably, we cannot agree with
the learned judge’s
conclusions or the outcome of the appeal as
proposed by him.
[30]
In
paragraph 24 of the judgment, his conclusion that ‘
A
child who is apparently normal, albeit possibly with some emotional
problems before being knocked over by a car at the age of
six and who
then fails Grade 1 later that year and Grade 5 a few years later is
probably suffering from the consequences of the
accident’
was
simply not supported by proven primary facts. Other factors unrelated
to the accident, such as DTK having changed schools several
times in
the years following the accident and having missed out on a full
preparatory year by not attending Grade R, coupled with
the fact that
DKT”s genetic capability before the accident was entirely
unknown, may well have influenced her grades. Ultimately,
however, a
court’s decision cannot be based on speculation, just as facts
themselves must be admitted or proven, not matters
of
speculation.
[11]
[31]
The view expressed in paragraph 25 of the
judgment, namely, that ‘
It is not
necessary for a physical head injury to Kgomotso to be proved’
and that ‘The question is whether the accident
caused damages.
The question is not whether the accident caused a physical head
injury
’
is inconsistent with
established law.
[32]
In
Evins
v Shield Insurance
[12]
,
the elements of
an
Aquilian action for damages were set out as follows
:
“
In
the case of an Aquilian action for damages for bodily injury…
the basic ingredients of the plaintiff’s cause of
action are
(a) a wrongful act by the defendant causing bodily injury, (b)
accompanied by fault, in the sense of culpa or dolus,
on the part of
the defendant, and (c) damnum, i.e. loss to plaintiff’s
patrimony, caused by the bodily injury…”
[33]
In this case, the
damnum
claimed by the plaintiff is calculated by the
plaintiff’s experts for loss of earnings only on the basis that
a head injury
was sustained, making proof of a physical head injury
necessary for any quantum to be paid. Where the head injury is
not
proved, no quantum is payable.
Order
[34]
Accordingly, the following order is made: -
(1)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
Turner AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg
Concurring
Maier-Frawley J
Judge of the High Court
of South Africa
Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg
Wright
J (dissenting)
1.
K[…] D[…] was born on 20 December, 2009. On 3 May, 2016
when she was six years old she was injured when knocked
over by a
car. Her mother, Ms D[…] caused an action to be instituted
against the Fund in October, 2021.
2.
The particulars of claim allege a head injury, a fracture of the
right distal tibia/fibula, various bruises, abrasions,
lacerations
and soft tissue injuries.
3.
General damages were sought in the amount of R1 000 000.
4.
The Fund defended the action. It went to trial before Mazibuko AJ.
5.
A mere two days before trial, Ms D[…]’s attorney served
notice of intention to effect an amendment to the
particulars of
claim to add a claim for R7 992 904 for future loss of earnings.
Despite the Fund’s attorney, Ms Mhlongo
objecting and alleging
prejudice the amendment was allowed and the trial proceeded but only
on the question of future loss of earnings.
6.
Ms D[…]’s attorney had delivered numerous expert reports
sometime earlier. These included an actuary’s
report by Mr
Sauer which calculated the future loss of earnings at R7 992 904.
7.
The claim for general damages did not proceed.
8.
The Fund conceded liability for 100% of proven damages.
9.
At the trial, various witnesses testified for K[…] after which
the Fund closed its case without calling witnesses.
10.
The claim for future loss of earnings was dismissed. Ms D[…]
now appeals and with the leave of Mazibuko AJ.
11. Dr
Azhar, a neurosurgeon testified first. He spoke of a mild head injury
to K[…]. He conceded that neither the RAF
1 form nor the
hospital records alluded to a head injury. He suggested that Kgomotso
be sent for an MRI scan. This had never been
done. He appeared to
rely on complaints by Ms D[…] that K[...] experienced
headaches and had failed at school post-accident
for his assessment
that K[...] had sustained a mild head injury in the accident. Dr
Azhar said that the fact that the admitting
hospital had not picked
up a head injury did not mean that there was no such injury. He said
that even if an MRI scan did not pick
up an injury, this does not
exclude the possibility.
12.
In my view, Dr Ahzar’s evidence does not take the matter much
further, although he did validly ask what else could
have caused the
failures at school, the reported headaches, short term memory
problems and poor calculation. The reporting of these
problems was by
Ms D[...] who reported to Dr Azhar and to the other experts.
13.
Mr Maturure, an industrial psychologist testified, saying that he
relied on Ms D[...] for information. K[...] was normal
before the
accident. K[...] failed Grade 1 in 2016, the accident having been in
May, 2016. K[...] repeated the year and passed
and has passed
subsequent years. He conceded that he was not in possession of school
reports.
14.
Pre-morbid, Mr Maturure said that K[...] would possibly have passed
Grade 12. Post-morbid, she will likely attain only
Grade 11. Mr
Maturure conceded that Ms D[...] was the source of his information
and that he relied on the other experts. He conceded
not being able
to say why K[...] failed post-accident.
15.
Ms Mathebula, an occupational therapist gave evidence that K[...]
walked without limitation and communicated fluently.
Ms Dlada had
reported to Ms Mathebula that K[...] was short tempered and cried
easily. K[...] is not a candidate for heavy duty
physical work but
retains capacity for light to medium duties with reasonable rest
periods. K[...]’s productivity will be
compromised by headaches
and a painful right ankle.
16.
Ms Radebe, a clinical psychologist testified that K[...] had failed
and repeated Grade 1 and Grade 5, both post-accident.
Ms Radebe
diagnosed memory struggles but also noted pre-morbid emotional
problems caused possibly by K[...] living with an alcoholic
grandmother and having to endure life without her father who was an
absent father.
17.
Ms Matlala, an educational psychologist testified. She testified that
pre-morbid, K[...] had not failed any subject at
school and would
have attained Grade 12 and then gone on to obtain an NQF6 diploma.
Post morbid, K[...] will, at best achieve a
Grade 11 NQF3. Ms Matlala
testified that Ms D[...] had told her that pre-morbid, K[...] did not
have behavioural or emotional problems.
Ms Matlala seems to have
assessed K[...] as easy going and able to handle her own emotions.
18.
Ms Matlala testified that Ms D[...] seemed to have reported different
things to different doctors.
19.
It was then agreed between the legal practitioners that the evidence
of Dr Tladi, an orthopaedic surgeon and the report
of the actuary, Mr
Sauer could be admitted into evidence. Both experts had filed
affidavits confirming the correctness of their
reports.
20.
Dr Tladi confirms a right leg distal fracture but says that K[...]
now has normal gait.
21.
Ms D[...] was not called to testify but it appears from the evidence
of the experts that she had told the various experts
of headaches
suffered by K[...] and of her having failed at school.
22.
No evidence was led for the Fund.
23.
To a large extent, the medical experts defer to each other.
Ultimately, to a great extent, the experts rely on what Ms
D[...]
told each expert whom she consulted.
24.
At the end of the day, I am of the view that the appeal should
succeed. The evidence for Ms D[...] was challenged but
not
contradicted. A child who is apparently normal, albeit possibly with
some emotional problems before being knocked over by a
car at the age
of six and who then fails Grade 1 later that year and Grade 5 a few
years later is probably suffering from the consequences
of the
accident.
25.
It is not necessary for a physical head injury to K[...] to be
proved. In delict, a plaintiff needs to prove a wrongful
act or
omission, fault in the form of intention or negligence and that the
wrongful act or omission caused the damages claimed.
The Fund
conceded liability for proven damages. That concession disposes of
the elements of wrongfulness and fault. The question
is whether the
accident caused damages. The question is not whether the accident
caused a physical head injury. The psychological
trauma of being
knocked over by a vehicle is likely to be significant and it is
likely to carry negative consequences.
26.
Neither the original particulars of claim, nor the particulars post
amendment comply with Uniform
Rule 18(10)
which requires that
damages sought be set out with sufficient particularity to enable the
defendant to see how the
amount claimed is calculated. However,
in the present matter, all the expert reports, including that of the
actuary were filed
some time before trial. The amendment sought
future loss of earnings in the sum of R7 992 904. The Fund
was thus in possession
of all the evidence to be used by the
plaintiff prior to receipt of the amendment.
27.
The report of Mr Sauer was not challenged other than indirectly in an
attempt to weaken the assumptions, referred to above,
on which it was
based.
28.
Mr Sauer calculated future earnings without the accident at
R10 557 618. He calculated future earnings with
the
accident at R755 316. I see no reason to differ from either
figure.
29.
Mr Sauer then applied contingencies. From uninjured earnings, Mr
Sauer deducted 0.5% per year, using a 40 year working
life. Thus, 20%
was deducted from R10 557 618, leaving R8 446 094.
Mr Sauer then deducted 40% from injured
earnings of R755 316
leaving R 453 190. I see no reason to interfere with the
post-accident contingencies.
30.
However, I would increase the pre-morbid contingency deduction.
K[...] was very young and there was some talk among the
experts of
her having emotional problems pre-accident. Without the accident, she
faced 59 years, from age 6 to age 65, being her
expected retirement
age pre and post-accident, during which the uncertainties of life
could operate. I would increase pre-morbid
contingencies to 40
%. This would reduce the R10 557 618 to R6 334 570.
Deducting from this latter amount the amount
of R453 190 leaves
nett damages at R5 881 380.
31.
I propose the following order:
1.
The appeal succeeds in part.
2.
The respondent is to pay the appellant’s costs in the appeal.
3.
The dismissal of the claim for future loss of earnings is set aside
and is replaced with an order reading “ The Road
Accident Fund
is liable to pay Ms D[...] R5 881 380 for future loss of income
for K[...] D[...]. The Fund is to pay the plaintiff’s
costs to
date. These costs include the qualifying fees of the experts in
respect of whom expert notices were delivered. “
Dissenting minority
Wright J
Judge of the High Court
of South Africa
Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
7 February 2024
JUDGMENT
DATE:
23 February 2024
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Adv M
Phathela
INSTRUCTED
BY:
BH
Taula R Rikhotso Inc
FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
Adv Mhlongo
INSTRUCTED
BY:
State
Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
[1980]
2 All SA 40
(A) at 58
[2]
C
Septoo obo J M Septoo & another v The Road Accident
Fund
(058/2017)
[2017]
ZASCA 164
(29 November 2017)
[3]
PriceWaterhouse
Coopers Inc v National Potato Cooperative Ltd 2015 JDR 0371 (SCA) at
para 97.
[4]
With
reference to Wightman v Widdrington (Succession de)
2013 QCCA 1187
(CAN LII).
[5]
In
dealing with this, the SCA referred to Gentiruco AG v Firestone SA
(Pty) Ltd
1972 (1) SA 589
(AD) at 616H; Coopers (South Africa) (Pty)
Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft Fer Schadlingbekampfung MPH
1976 (3) SA
352
(A) at 370-371.
[6]
A
M
and
Another v MEC for Health, Western Cape
2021
(3) SA 337
(SCA) at para 21
[7]
Road
Accident Fund v S M
(1270/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 103
(22 August 2019) at paras 1 + 2
[8]
MV
Pasquale della Gatta; MV Filippo Lembo; Imperial Marine Co v
Deiulemar Compagnia di Navigazione Spa ZASCA
2012
(1) SA 58
(SCA),
para 26
[9]
I
note that the affidavit also refers to the accident having taken
place on 10 May 2022 and positively identifies the driver of
the
vehicle (contrary to the content of the particulars of claim).
[10]
PriceWaterhouse
Coopers Inc v National Potato Cooperative Ltd
(supra) at para 99, where the court approved of what was said
in
Widdrington
(Estate of) c. Wightman
,
2011
QCCS 1788
(CanLII)
.
[11]
A
M and Another v MEC for Health, Western Cape
2021 (3) SA 337
(SCA), par 17.
[12]
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
[1980]
2 All SA 40
(A) at 58
sino noindex
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