Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 566South Africa
Swanepoel v Reynecke (A2024/002787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 566 (14 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 June 2024
Headnotes
that, where liability for damages caused by an animal attack is pressed in an action based on the wrongful and
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Swanepoel v Reynecke (A2024/002787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 566 (14 June 2024)
Swanepoel v Reynecke (A2024/002787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 566 (14 June 2024)
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sino date 14 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
14
June 2024
Case
No. A2024-002787
In the matter between:
SUSANNA
SWANEPOEL
Appellant
and
MARK
REYNECKE
Respondent
CORAM: CRUTCHFIELD J,
WILSON J and DU PLESSIS AJ
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom CRUTCHFIELD J and DU PLESSIS AJ agree)
:
1
On 30 July 2020, the
respondent’s daughter, J, was attacked and mauled by two pit
bulls in the back garden of a property belonging
to the appellant,
Ms. Swanepoel. The two dogs, which also belonged to Ms. Swanepoel,
were, at the time, rearing a litter of puppies.
2
The respondent, Mr.
Reynecke, sued Ms. Swanepoel in the court below in his representative
capacity claiming the medical expenses
and general damages J
sustained as a result of the attack. The questions of liability and
quantum were separated, and the trial
proceeded in the court below on
11, 12 and 13 October 2022 on the question of liability alone.
3
On 7 November 2022, the
court below gave judgment for Mr. Reynecke, primarily on the bases
that the dog attack was foreseeable,
and that Ms. Swanepoel did not
give evidence of the steps she took to prevent it. Ms. Swanepoel now
appeals against that decision,
with the leave of the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
4
Mr. Louw, who appeared for
Ms. Swanepoel before us, staked his case on the decision of this
court in
Green v Naidoo
2007 (6) SA 372
(W). In
Green
,
Satchwell J held that, where liability for damages caused by an
animal attack is pressed in an action based on the wrongful and
negligent conduct of the animal’s owner, it must be established
that the animal attack was foreseeable. Foreseeability is
ordinarily
established by reference to whether the animal in question has a
history of, or predisposition to, aggression. Where
no such history
or predisposition is established, it will generally be difficult to
conclude that the owner of the animal could
have foreseen the attack.
5
Mr. Louw argued that Mr.
Reynecke had not discharged the onus on him in the court below to
demonstrate that the attack on J was
foreseeable. For that reason,
Mr. Louw argued, there was effectively no case for Ms. Swanepoel to
answer there, no basis on which
the court below could have given
judgment for Mr. Reynecke, and accordingly no need for Ms. Swanepoel
to have given evidence.
6
In this Mr. Louw was
mistaken. Not only was the foreseeability of the attack effectively
conceded in Ms. Swanepoel’s plea, it was
plainly
established on the evidence. Foreseeability having
been conceded on the pleadings and established in the evidence, Ms.
Swanepoel
led no evidence whatsoever of the measures she alleged were
taken to prevent the attack. Ms. Swanepoel’s failure to testify
caused the court below to draw an inference against her. That
inference was that no such preventative measures were taken. Relying
in part on that conclusion, the court below found that Ms. Swanepoel
had wrongfully and negligently failed to prevent the injuries
that J
sustained.
7
In my view, the court
below was entirely correct in its approach. The appeal must fail. In
giving my reasons for reaching that conclusion,
I shall first address
the issues that were defined in the pleadings before the court below.
I shall then address the relevant evidence.
The
concessions in Ms. Swanepoel’s plea
8
In paragraph 5 of his
particulars of claim, Mr. Reynecke alleged that Ms. Swanepoel had a
duty of care to the general public, and
in particular to J, to guard
against the attack that took place. In paragraph 6 of those
particulars, Mr. Reynecke said that Ms.
Swanepoel had breached that
duty by keeping dangerous dogs on the premises when she ought
reasonably to have foreseen that the
dogs would attack and cause
injury to J; by failing to keep the dogs locked in a secure
enclosure; by failing to warn J that the
dogs were dangerous; and by
failing to take such other precautions as were reasonable to prevent
the attack.
9
In paragraph 5 of her
plea, Ms. Swanepoel accepted that she had the duty of care alleged.
In paragraph 8, Ms. Swanepoel “specifically
pleaded that the
female dog had puppies and as such [the dog] was isolated and kept in
a separate enclosure on the porch”.
In paragraph 9.3 of her
plea, Ms. Swanepoel alleged that she warned J “as she warns all
visitors that the female dog had
puppies and may be more protective
than usual”.
10
Mr. Louw was unable to
convince us that these averments were anything less than an admission
that the dog was potentially dangerous
and that it was liable to
attack those who approached it while it was rearing its puppies. In
my view, the issue of foreseeability
was accordingly conceded in the
plea, and no evidence need have been led of that fact.
11
Mr. Louw argued against
this approach, relying on the dictum of Cloete JA in
Imvula
Quality Protection v Loureiro
2013 (3) SA 407
(SCA) at paragraph
47, that “cases are decided on the evidence, not on the
pleadings”. That much is true, but nothing
that was said in
Imvula
sought to interfere with the trite proposition that a
fact conceded in a plea is a fact of which no evidence need be led.
12
In this case, the
defence mounted in the plea entailed the concession that the attack
was foreseeable. Ms. Swanepoel’s case
in her plea was not that
she could not have known that the dogs might attack, but that she
foresaw that at least one of them might
attack and that she took
measures to prevent it from doing so. Mr. Reynecke was not required
to lead evidence that Ms. Swanepoel
foresaw the very outcome that she
pleaded she took measures to prevent.
The
evidence on foreseeability and prevention
13
In any event, the evidence
led on Mr. Reynecke’s behalf did more than enough to establish,
at least
prima facie
, that the attack on J was both
foreseeable and foreseen. J gave evidence that Ms. Swanepoel’s
husband “het vir my ma
gesê dat die kinders weet hulle
moet die honde bêre voordat iemand kom kuier” (“told
my mum that the children
knew to put the dogs away before someone
comes to visit”). Mr. Louw dismissed this evidence as
inadmissible hearsay that
could not be imputed to Ms. Swanepoel.
However, it seems to me that the evidence accords entirely with Ms.
Swanepoel’s plea,
and that the court below was entitled to have
regard to it in considering whether, Ms. Swanepoel’s pleaded
admissions aside,
the attack was at least
prima facie
foreseeable.
14
When evaluated in context,
J’s evidence is not hearsay, and there is no need to “impute”
anything to Ms. Swanepoel
on the basis of it. J’s evidence need
not have been tendered to prove that the Swanepoels’ children
actually knew to
put the dogs away, or that Ms. Swanepoel had said
so. All that matters is that the evidence shows that it was present
to Mr. Swanepoel’s
mind that the dogs needed to be “put
away”. If that was present to his mind, it must surely have
been foreseeable to
anyone living in the house, as Ms. Swanepoel did,
that the dogs needed to be confined because of the potential threat
they posed.
15
Moreover, there was the
expert evidence of Dr. Greenberg, a qualified vet and self-described
ethologist, or expert in animal behaviour.
Dr. Greenberg gave
evidence that pit bulls are an aggressive breed, and that a female
dog with puppies is likely to be aggressive.
The foresight that a dog
with puppies may be aggressive seems to me to be something a Judge is
entitled to infer from ordinary
human experience. Be that as it may,
if expert evidence was required, the court below heard it.
16
Mr. Louw criticised Dr.
Greenberg as a biased witness. It is hard for me to discern the
gravamen of this criticism. Dr. Greenberg
was plainly not biased
against any of the parties. The suggestion seems to have been that
Dr. Greenberg had an inherent bias against
pit bulls. However, even
if that is accepted, it is hard to see how it supplies a basis on
which to reject Dr. Greenberg’s
unsurprising observation that a
dog with puppies might bite.
The
approach of the court below
17
In reality, there was more
than enough on the pleadings and in the evidence before the court
below for it to form the view that
the attack on J was foreseeable,
and that measures, such as the measures enumerated in Ms. Swanepoel’s
plea, were warranted.
Yet, Ms. Swanepoel led no evidence that those
measures were taken. The court below drew the appropriate adverse
inference from
this failure: that the measures Ms. Swanepoel pleaded
she took were not in fact taken.
18
That, coupled with Ms.
Swanepoel’s failure to lead evidence to rebut the
prima
facie
evidence that the attack on J was foreseeable and in fact
foreseen, was more than enough for the court to be satisfied that
negligence
was established, and that judgment should be given for Mr.
Reynecke.
19
No criticism was advanced
of any other aspect of the approach or the conclusions of the court
below, which I consider to be correct
in every respect. The appeal
fails.
Costs
20
Both counsel sought costs
on the “B” scale as provided for in Rule 67A. I said in
Mashavha v Enaex Africa
(Pty) Ltd [2024] ZAGPJHC 387 (22 April
2024) at paragraph 26, that scales “B” and “C”
should only apply
to “truly important, complex or valuable
cases”. I accept that this case and the injuries it involves
are of a great
deal of importance to Mr. Reynecke and to J, but I do
not think that the case has an objective value or complexity that
justifies
costs on the “B” scale.
Order
21
For all these reasons, the
appeal is dismissed with costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 14 June
2024.
HEARD
ON:
5 June 2024
DECIDED
ON:
14 June 2024
For
the Appellant:
M
Louw
Instructed by HJ
Badenhorst & Associates Inc
For
the Respondent: RA Britz
Instructed by Burnett
Attorneys
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