Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 452South Africa
Tshuma v Road Accident Fund (2023/045963) [2024] ZAGPJHC 452 (8 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tshuma v Road Accident Fund (2023/045963) [2024] ZAGPJHC 452 (8 May 2024)
Tshuma v Road Accident Fund (2023/045963) [2024] ZAGPJHC 452 (8 May 2024)
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sino date 8 May 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023-045963
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
8
May 2024
In
the matter between:
NOMVULA
HLANJIWE TSHUMA
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND Defendant
JUDGMENT
WEIDEMAN AJ
[1]
This matter was on the default judgment
roll for the 26
th
March 2024.
When the matter was called,
there was no appearance for the RAF, despite due notice of the trial
date being given to it. The matter
proceeded on a default basis.
[2]
It was first stood down until 11h30 at the
request of the plaintiff’s representative and thereafter again
to 14h00. At 14h00
there was a further request to stand the matter
down until 10h00 the next day. On the 27
th
March 2024, when the matter was called at 10h00 there was a final
request for a further stand down until 11h30 when the matter
eventually began.
[3]
The plaintiff lodged a claim with the
defendant (“the RAF") in terms of the provisions of the
Road Accident Fund Act,
No. 56 of 1996 (“the Act”)
claiming damages resulting from the injuries sustained in the
collision.
[4]
Counsel for the plaintiff proceeded to
present her case in respect of all issues of liability and quantum
[excluding the claim for
general damages, for reasons set out later].
[5]
After hearing the evidence of the plaintiff
and argument by counsel, I reserved judgment.
LIABILITY
[6]
The plaintiff bears the onus to prove that
the RAF is liable under the provisions of the Act, to compensate her
for damages suffered
because of the injuries sustained in the
collision. This includes the onus to prove that the driver of the
insured vehicle negligently
caused the collision.
[7]
Application was made in terms of Rule 38(2)
of the Uniform Rules of Court that I hear evidence on affidavit, as
it would be expedient
to do so. The affidavits deposed to by all the
expert witnesses are filed of record.
[8]
Havenga v Parker
1993 (3) SA 724
(T),
confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Madibeng Local Municipality v Public
Investment Corporation
2018 (6) SA 55
(SCA),
found it is permissible to place expert evidence before the Court by
way of affidavits in terms of Rule 38(2). Accordingly, that
application was granted.
[9]
The plaintiff substantially complied with
the requirements set out in the Practice Directives of this Court and
the Uniform Rules
of Court, entitling her to proceed on a default
basis.
[10]
The accident from which this claim arose
occurred on the 26 June 2020. According to the particulars of claim
“The plaintiff
was a pedestrian walking along Esselen Street,
Hillbrow. When the plaintiff was about to cross Kotze Street, a motor
vehicle approached
at high speed and hit the plaintiff from the
back.” [CaseLines 02-4]
[11]
According to the plaintiff’s Section
19(f) affidavit the following occurred: “I was coming from work
walking along Esselen
Street approaching the Rea Vaya Bus station,
when I was about to cross Kotze Street a motor vehicle approached at
high speed and
hit me from the back”.
[12]
I lost consciousness and I woke up at
Hillbrow Community Clinic.” [CaseLines 04-52]
[13]
The next document of relevance is the
Accident Report Form [CaseLines 04-60 to 04-63]. From it one deduces
that the 26 June 2020
was a Friday. This is only relevant as an
indication of what the possible traffic flow could have been at 17h35
on a Friday afternoon
in Hillbrow, albeit there is no evidence before
court as to what the traffic conditions may have been. It is
interesting that the
Accident Report Form does not contain any
version of how the accident may have occurred. It only add to the
available information
by confirming that the street in which the
accident allegedly occurred is a one-way street.
[14]
According to the hospital records she had a
3cm laceration on the right side of her forehead and a dislocated
shoulder. She was
treated and discharged the same evening. The
treating personnel did not consider it necessary to keep her for
observation or to
do a CT scan or investigate whether there was a
brain injury. [CaseLines 04-48 to 04-51]
[15]
According to the medico-legal report of Ms
D Mathebula, occupational therapist, she lost and regained
consciousness at the scene
of the accident and was assisted by a
bystander to walk to the hospital which was about two hundred meters
away. [CaseLines 08-3]
[16]
The same version of how she got to the
hospital is also recorded in the report of L Modipa, the clinical
psychologist. [CaseLines
08-35]
[17]
In contrast to the above the plaintiff
reported to Dr Mazwi, neurosurgeon, that she was transported to
hospital in an ambulance.
[CaseLines 08-60]
[18]
In debating the mechanism of the accident
with counsel it was put to her that it is difficult to understand how
the accident occurred.
Both in her particulars of claim and in her
section 19(f) affidavit the plaintiff clearly states that the
offending vehicle was
travelling at speed. The plaintiff is equally
adamant that the vehicle collided with her from behind. How does she
then know that
it was travelling at speed?
[19]
Counsel was also asked to assist the court
by proffering an explanation of how the mechanism of the accident
could have occurred.
If the vehicle hit her from behind, at speed,
one would expect some injury to her pelvis or back from the primary
contact with
the vehicle, yet she has no injuries to her back or
pelvis.
[20]
Further, how does a vehicle hit her from
behind, but her injuries consist of a laceration to the front of her
head (forehead) and
a dislocated shoulder?
[21]
According to photos that were available in
court the Rea Vaya Bus station had been built in the centre of the
road with one lane
of travel passing on each side of the bus station
platform. The lanes are fairly narrow.
[22]
Looking at the scene of the collision the
only possible conclusion is that the collision must have occurred
somewhere on the road.
The difficulty with this scenario is that it
would have been impossible for the vehicle to collide with the
plaintiff with the
front of the vehicle and for it to continue
driving without driving over the plaintiff, given the raised platform
of the bus station
on the one side and the raised sidewalk on the
other.
[23]
Counsel conceded that the plaintiff lied,
under oath, that she was unconscious after the accident and only woke
up at Hillbrow Hospital.
She walked to the clinic herself.
[24]
Similarly, it is the opinion of this court
that she was not truthful when she claimed that the vehicle was
travelling at speed.
Speed and her injuries are contra indicated.
[25]
Does that imply that no collision occurred?
No, it must be accepted that a collision did occur but how the
collision occurred is
not known. Given the scene of the accident it
is also not possible for the collision to have occurred anywhere else
but on the
road surface. If this is accepted, then it must also be
accepted that there is some negligence on the part of the driver of
the
unknown vehicle.
[26]
At the same time, the plaintiff must have
been on the road surface. According to the Accident Report Form it
was a one-way street
and she therefore only had to keep traffic from
one direction in mind yet, for reasons not known to the court, she
simply never
saw the vehicle.
[27]
Given the dearth of facts and not wanting
to non-suit the plaintiff I find that both parties must accept equal
responsibility for
the collision and the plaintiff will therefore be
entitled to 50% of such damages as she might be able to substantiate.
QUANTUM
[28]
The plaintiff is claiming general damages
and filed the required RAF4 forms in support thereof. However, there
is no indication
that the RAF formed a view on the seriousness of the
injuries sustained by the plaintiff.
[29]
Counsel for the plaintiff conceded that the
decision whether the injuries of the plaintiff are serious enough to
meet the threshold
requirement for an award of general damages, was
conferred on the RAF and not on the Court. The assessment of damages
as “serious”
is determined administratively in terms of
the manner prescribed by the RAF Regulations, 2008, and not by the
Courts. Accordingly,
the plaintiff’s claim for general damages
will be separated from the other heads of damages and postponed.
[30]
Meyer AJ (as he then was) held in
Mathebula
v RAF (05967/05)
[2006]
ZAGPHC
261 (8 November 2006) at para [13]:
“
An
expert is not entitled, any more than any other witness, to give
hearsay evidence as to any fact, and all facts on which the
expert
witness relies must ordinarily be established during the trial,
except those facts which the expert draws as a conclusion
by reason
of his or her expertise from other facts which have been admitted by
the other party or established by admissible evidence.
(See: Coopers
(South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft für
Schädlingsbekämpfung MBH,
1976 (3) SA 352
(A) at p 371G;
Reckitt & Colman SA (Pty) Ltd v S C Johnson & Son SA (Pty)
Ltd
1993 (2) SA 307
(A) at p 315E); Lornadawn Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Minister van Landbou
1977 (3) SA 618
(T) at p 623; and Holtzhauzen v
Roodt
1997 (4) SA 766
(W) at 772I).”
[31]
In
Michael and
Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty)Ltd and Another
(2002) 1 All SA
384
(A),
the Supreme Court of Appeal
had the following to say regarding the approach to be adopted in
dealing with the expert evidence:
"[34] . . . . . . . As a
rule, that determination will not involve considerations of
credibility but rather the examination
of the opinions and the
analysis of their essential reasoning, preparatory to the court's
reaching its conclusion on the issues
raised."
[36] That being so, what
is required in the evaluation of such evidence is to determine
whether and to what extent
their opinions advanced are founded on
logical reasoning. . . .”
[32]
In Twine and Another v Naidoo and
Another (38940/14) [2017] ZAGPJHC 288;
[2018] 1All SA 297
(GJ),
the court had the following as a guide in
approaching the expert evidence:
“
Para
18: a. The admission of expert evidence should be guarded as it is
open to abuse, c. The expert testimony should only be introduced
if
it is relevant and reliable. Otherwise, it is inadmissible. ."
r. A court is not bound by, nor obliged to accept, the evidence
of an
expert witness: "It is for (the presiding officer) to base his
findings upon opinions properly brought forward and based
upon
foundations which justified the formation of the opinion." s.
The court should actively evaluate the evidence. The cogency
of the
evidence should be weighed "in the contextual matrix of the case
with which (the Court) is seized. If there are competing
experts, it
can reject the evidence of both experts and should do so where
appropriate. The principle applies even where the court
is presented
with the evidence of only one expert witness on a disputed fact.
There is no need for the court to be presented with
the competing
opinions of more than one expert witness in order to reject the
evidence of that witness. 2023 JDR 1213 p11 t.”
[33]
It is trite that the plaintiff bears the
onus to prove how the injuries have affected her in respect of her
earning capacity.
[34]
There is a difference between the question
whether the plaintiff has suffered an impairment of earning capacity,
and the question
whether the plaintiff will in fact suffer a loss of
income in the future.
[35]
The latter question is one of assessment in
respect of which there is no onus in the traditional sense. It
involves the exercise
of quantifying as best one can, the chance of
the loss occurring.
[36]
It is now trite that any enquiry into
damages for loss of earning capacity is by nature speculative. All
the court can do is estimate
the present value of the loss whilst it
is helpful to take note of the actuarial calculations, a court still
has the discretion
to award what it considers right.
[37]
With the above as background I now turn to
the medico-legal reports filed of record. The first of these that
must be considered
is that of the neurosurgeon, Dr Mazwi [CaseLines
08-58 to 08-74]
[38]
According to his report he had only the RAF
1 claim form and the Hillbrow hospital records available to him. In
examining the plaintiff
he found:
·
No abnormality in respect of the cranial
nerves.
·
No ophthalmic abnormality.
·
No trigeminal abnormalities.
·
No facial abnormalities.
·
No vestibulocochlear deviations.
·
Oculomotor, Aducencs, Throchlear –
all normal
·
Glossopharyngeal, Vagus – all normal
·
Hypoglossal – all normal
·
Motor examination: normal muscle bulk and
normal power in all groups with normal balance and gait posture.
·
Sensory examination: all sensory modalities
and dermatones intact.
·
Spine: normal curvature of the spine,
non-tender.
·
Chest: all normal
·
Cardiovascular: all normal
·
Abdomen: all normal
[39]
Factually, based on his examination,
he found nothing wrong with the plaintiff. Based on the hospital
records and the fact that
the plaintiff’s GCS was 15/15 he
finds there was a mild head injury. This does not equate to a brain
injury.
[40]
No CT or MRI scan was performed, not during
the original treatment, not at any stage thereafter and not as part
of his evaluation.
The only “evidence” available to Dr
Mazwi was the verbal reporting of the plaintiff.
[41]
The following comment in the case of
AM
and another v MEC Health, Western Cape (1258/2018)
[2020] ZASCA 89
(31 July 2020)
is equally applicable
in
casu
:
“
[21]
The opinions of expert witnesses involve the drawing of inferences
from facts. If they are tenuous, or far-fetched, they cannot
form the
foundation of the court to make findings 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.”
[42]
To the extent that all the conclusions of
Dr Mazwi is based only on the reporting of the plaintiff and that his
own assessment found
nothing wrong there were simply no facts
available on which Dr Mazwi could conclude that the plaintiff
sustained anything other
than a mild concussion, at best.
[43]
Dr Mazwi’s medico-legal report is of
no assistance to the court and his conclusions, as far as it suggests
a brain injury,
is not accepted.
[44]
The occupational therapist Ms. D Mathebula
concluded that the plaintiff retains the competency for light to low
medium duties with
reasonable accommodation. The physical demands of
her pre- and post-accident occupation as a domestic worker and child
minder falls
within light to medium duties.
[45]
The industrial psychologist recorded the
history as provided by the plaintiff and quoted extensively from the
other medico-legal
reports. What is however glaring in its absence is
any source documentation in respect of employment. There is no
contract of employment,
there are no payslips, there are no bank
statements, there is no indication that any attempt has been made to
interview the employer
to confirm the plaintiff’s employment
and to enquire from the employer as to the reason why the plaintiff
is only working
3 days a week at the stage that she saw the
plaintiff.
[46]
According to the industrial psychologist’s
report the plaintiff left Capello’s restaurant, first in
Sandton City and
thereafter in Melville for better prospects. At the
time she left she was earning R5000 to R6 000 per month, yet she
accepted
employment with a Mr Govender at R4 200 per month. This
is never questioned or interrogated by the industrial psychologist.
[47]
At the time of her assessment in June 2022
the plaintiff was working for the same employer as she worked for
pre-accident but only
three days per week at an income of R4 500,
more than she earned pre-accident.
[48]
The only confirmed injuries the plaintiff
sustained were an injury to the right shoulder and an injury to the
forehead. Most of
her residual complains relate to her eyes (which Dr
Mazwi found normal), her back and her knee, neither of which were
injured in
the accident. [CaseLines 08-89]
[49]
There are no facts contained in the report
of the industrial psychologist that could serve as a foundation on
which to find a claim
for loss of income. The alleged, unproven,
reasons why she cannot work a full week does not appear to be
accident related.
[50]
The report of the industrial psychologist
is of no assistance to the court.
[51]
The report of the actuary is of assistance
only to the extent that it assist in quantifying the possible claim
for past loss of
income. In this regard the amount as per the
actuarial report is allowed, less 50%, i.e. R33 956.50.
[52]
It is the opinion of this court that there
is no substantiated claim for future loss of income or loss of
earning capacity.
[53]
In the circumstances I make the
following order
:
53.1 The defendant is liable for 50%
of such damages as the plaintiff may be able to prove.
53.2 The Defendant shall pay to
the plaintiff the amount of R33 956.50 in respect of the claim
for past loss of earnings.
53.3 The plaintiff’s claim for
future loss of income is dismissed.
53.3 The amount of R33 956.50
shall be paid to the plaintiff within 180 (ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY)
Court days of the date of
this Court Order.
53.4 In the event of the aforesaid
amount not being paid timeously, the defendant shall be liable for
interest on the amount
a tempore morae
, calculated 14
(FOURTEEN) days after the date of this Order to date of payment, as
set out in
Section 17(3)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
.
53.5 The claim for general damages is
separated from all other issues of quantum, and is postponed
sine
die
.
53.6 The Defendant shall issue an
undertaking in terms of
Section 17
(4) (a) of the
Road Accident Fund
Act as
amended, limited to 50%.
53.7 The defendant shall pay the
plaintiff’s taxed or agreed party and party costs on the High
Court scale.
WEIDEMAN AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email, by being uploaded to
Case Lines
.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 08 May 2024.
Heard
on:
26 & 27 March 2024
Delivered
on: 08 May
2024
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Plaintiff:
Ms A N Nyathi
071 859 1526
annyathi@dikeattorneys.co.za
On
behalf of the Defendant: No appearance
sino noindex
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