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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 657
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## Tsebo v Ziyabuya Outsourcing CC (2023/011918)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 657 (12 July 2024)
Tsebo v Ziyabuya Outsourcing CC (2023/011918)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 657 (12 July 2024)
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sino date 12 July 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
: No
Of
Interest of Other Judges: No
Revised
Case
number
:
2023/011918
In the matter between
SIDINILE
TSEBO
Plaintiff
and
ZIYABUYA OUTSOURCING
CC
Defendant/Excipient
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by being uploaded
to caselines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
12h00 on 12 April 2024.
JUDGMENT
OSBORNE AJ:
1.
The Plaintiff pleads that on or about 20 September
2022, he was at his place of employment. He worked there as a
patcher. While
using a grinding machine on a roof, the ladder
collapsed under him. He suffered an injury to his upper arm and was
hospitalised.
He filed summons claiming compensation from his
employer at the time (the “Excipient” or “Defendant”)
in
the amount of R1 500 000.
2.
The latter lodged an exception alleging that
no cause of action was pleaded because the
Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act, No. 130 of
1993 (“COIDA”)
bars personal claims for matters within
the scope of that act. The Defendant also excepts to the Plaintiff’s
particulars
of claim on the basis they are vague and embarrassing.
3.
An
exception based on the contention that no cause of action is
disclosed is aimed at obtaining a decision on a point of law which
will be dispositive of the case, obviating the need to lead evidence
at trial.
[1]
However, an
exception can be upheld on this ground only if the claim is bad in
law, not if it
may
be
bad in law.
[2]
The onus is on
the excipient to persuade the Court that upon
every
interpretation
that can be placed upon the facts, the pleading is excipiable.
[3]
4.
As for
an allegation that the particulars are vague and embarrassing, the
excipient must show that the pleading lacks particularity,
such as to
render it vague
and
that
the vagueness is embarrassing, such that the excipient is
prejudiced.
[4]
To put it another
way: The Court must ask whether the exception goes to the heart of
the claim and, if so, “whether it is
embarrassing to the extent
that the defendant does not know the claim he has to meet”.
[5]
5.
Manifestly,
a plaintiff is not held to an exacting standard in formulating the
particulars of claim. Olivier AJ in
Giant
Leap Workspace Specialists (Pty) Ltd v Scoin Trading (Pty) Ltd T/A,
The South African Gold Coin Exchange
,
[6]
quoted Herbstein & Van Winsen (at p 636), to the effect that “
it
is sufficient if a defendant knows 'adequately' what a plaintiff's
case is or 'sufficiently' shows the Defendant the case which
he is
called upon to mee
t."
6.
It is worth quoting at length a venerable but
illuminating passage:
"‘The
true object of an exception is either, if possible, to settle the
case, or at least part of it, in a cheap and
easy fashion, or to
protect oneself against an embarrassment which is so serious as to
merit the costs even of an exception.’
In my opinion, the Court
should not look at a pleading with a magnifying glass of too
high power. If it does so, it will be
almost bound to find flaws in
most pleadings - except formal replications, but certainly including
the present exception itself.
It is so very easy, especially for busy
counsel, to make mistakes here or there, to say too much or too
little, or to express something
imperfectly. In my view, it is the
duty of the Court, when an exception is taken to a pleading, first to
see if there is a point
of law to be decided which will dispose of
the case in whole or in part. If there is not, then it must see if
there is any embarrassment,
which is real, and such as cannot be met
by the asking of particulars, as the result of the faults in pleading
to which exception
is taken. And, unless the excipient can satisfy
the Court that there is such a point of law or such real
embarrassment, then the
exception should be dismissed.”
[7]
DOES COIDA BAR THE
PLAINTIFF’S ACTION?
7.
Section 1 of COIDA contains the following
definitions that are salient to this matter.
7.1.
“
Disablement
”
means
“temporary partial disablement, temporary total disablement,
permanent disablement or serious disfigurement”,
as the case
may be.
7.2.
“
Occupational injury
”
means “a personal injury sustained as a
result of an accident”.
8.
Section 22 of COIDA reads:
“
If
an employee meets with an accident resulting in his
disablement
or
death
,
such employee or the dependents of such employee shall, subject to
the provisions of this Act, be entitled to the benefits provided
for
and prescribed in this Act.”
9.
The basis of the Defendant’s exception under
this head is s. 35(1) of COIDA.
"No action shall lie
by an employee or any dependent of an employee for the recovery of
damages in respect of any occupational
injury or disease resulting in
the
disablement
or
death
of such employee against such
employee's employer, and no liability for compensation on the part of
such employer shall arise save
under the provisions of this Act in
respect of such
disablement
or
death
." (Emphasis
added)
10.
Citing this language, Defendant alleges that
Plaintiff has failed to show that COIDA does not apply to his
claim, and he is
hence barred from approaching the High Court.
11.
Manifestly, the Plaintiff survived the fall. We
need to consider only whether he has pleaded that he was
disabled,
as that term is used in the Act. The
Plaintiff alleges that he sustained a
left
arm injury to biceps
[
sic
].
But he nowhere alleges that he has been disabled in consequence. It
might be thought that “partial” disablement is
implied by
the fact that the Plaintiff was hospitalised after the fall. But it
does not necessarily follow from having been hospitalised
that a
person has been rendered
disabled
within the meaning of COIDA. The Plaintiff also
pleads that he suffers from serious back pain and post-traumatic
disorder. But this
does not
ipso facto
denote physical disablement in the relevant sense.
Acute symptoms may not render a person disabled, whilst chronic
conditions might
well have that effect.
12.
One bears in mind that the purpose of COIDA is,
according to the preamble, to provide compensation for death or
“disablement
caused by occupational injuries or diseases
sustained or contracted by employees in the course of their
employment”.
COIDA was enacted to
ensure that those who are prevented from working owing to injuries on
the job are not left destitute - bearing
in mind that a lawsuit
against an employer may be fruitless if it lacks financial resources
or has gone out of business. Instead
of seeking relief in the High
Court, employees who became disabled as a result of being injured at
work must look for compensation
to the fund established under s.
15(1) of the Act, which is funded by employers at large.
13.
One must be guided by a familiar statutory
interpretive principle: A
legislative
provision that purports to oust the jurisdiction of the High Court is
to be read narrowly:
“
[
C]ourts
should be extremely wary of closing their doors to any litigant
entitled to approach a particular court. The doors of the
courts
should at all times be open to litigants falling within their
jurisdiction. If congested roles tend to hamper the proper
functioning of the courts, then a solution should be found elsewhere,
but not by refusing to hear a litigant or to entertain proceedings
in
a matter within the court's jurisdiction and properly before the
court.
”
[8]
14.
The underlying constitutional right is s. 34,
which protects the right of access to courts. This right may, under
s. 36, be limited
only in accordance with the constitutional values
and principles enumerated in that provision. It is trite that the
burden of proof
falls upon the litigant who asserts such limitations.
15.
Then
s. 21
of the
Superior Courts Act, No. 10 of
2013
, provides for the jurisdiction of High Courts “over all
persons residing or being in, and in relation to all causes arising
and all offences triable within, its area of jurisdiction and all
other matters of which it may according to the law take cognisance".
The provision is couched in the widest terms, suggesting a
legislative wish to interfere with the principles of common law
principles
of jurisdiction as little as possible. In sum, in the
absence of clear and definitive provisions limiting the Court's
jurisdiction,
the instrument should be read as widening rather than
as limiting the scope of jurisdiction.
16.
The Court, therefore, dismisses that component of
the Defendant’s exception founded on the claim that the High
Court lacks
jurisdiction to hear the Plaintiff's case and that no
cause of action has hence been pleaded.
CONTENTION THAT
PARTICULARS ARE VAGUE AND EMBARRASSING
17.
Plaintiff avers in his particulars of claim that
he:
"Suffered,
inter
alia
; personal injuries which required medical treatment,
including medical costs; post-traumatic stress disorder which has
required
professional medical treatment, and such other damages as
may manifest or become known in the future."
"As a result of the
injuries, which the Plaintiff sustained as a direct link (
sic
)
of the incident, the Plaintiff has the following sequelae and
symptoms: Still experiences loss of consciousness, excruciating
back
pain, pain and suffering; incurred hospital and medical expenses and
will in the future incur further hospital and medical
expenses; and
suffered emotional stress trauma and shock."
18.
As to quantum:
"As a result of the
sustained bodily injuries and sequelae thereof, the Plaintiff
suffered damages in the estimated amount
of R1 500 000.00 (one
million five hundred thousand Rand), which is calculated as follows:
(i) Non-pecuniary
damages for the physical impairment, emotional and psychological
trauma, discomfort, pain and suffering
and loss of amenities of life
for R600 000.00 (the Plaintiff alleges that it is not reasonably
practical to allocate portions of
this amount into different
subheadings);
(ii) Estimated past
loss of earnings, employability and diminished earning capacity of
R300 000.00;
(iii) Estimated
future loss of earnings, earning capacity and employability for R400
000.00;
(iv) Estimated past
and future medical and hospital expenses for R200 000.00."
19.
An amount of R200,000 is claimed with respect to
future medical exposure expenses, including physiotherapy,
painkillers, and occupational
therapy. And R300 000 is claimed
in respect of loss of earnings and earning capacity.
20.
The particulars assert that it is not reasonably
practical to allocate the amount of R600 000 claimed in respect of
non-pecuniary
damages into different subheadings.
21.
Undeniably, the particulars are characterised by
the kind of sloppy, over-inclusive, broad-brush allegations that are
all too common.
Yet I do not think these flaws go to the heart of the
claim; they are not so vague as to render it impossible for the
Defendant
properly to plead.
22.
No one
could quarrel with the claim that the Plaintiff’s particulars
do not comply with many of the strict requisites of Rule
18(10) of
the Uniform Rules. Yet I do not believe that the Plaintiff’s
failures support the exception. A plaintiff
is not required to
articulate his claim in a manner that will enable the defendant to
ascertain whether or not the plaintiff’s
assessment of
the
quantum
is
correct; the defendant has
a
duty to arrive at a reasonable assessment of the damages sustained by
the plaintiff.
[9]
23.
I am fortified in my finding by
Mandlala
v City of Johannesburg and Another
(23236/2017)
[2019] ZAGPJHC 80 (28 February 2019). The plaintiff plunged into
an
uncovered
manhole
on
the
pavement
on
a
public
street and
sustained injury. She sued on the basis that the defendant was
responsible for the design, maintenance, repairs and development
of
footways, pavements, sidewalks and management of manhole covers.
24.
The defendant contended that the pleadings were
excipiable for reasons rather similar to those raised by the
Defendant herein. Many
of the exceptions focused upon lack of
particularity as to quantum. To this, the plaintiff responded that
she had yet to undergo
full assessment by medical experts and that
the amount claimed would be quantified upon receipt of relevant
medical reports.
25.
Dismissing the exception, the Court in
Mandala
observed that medical reports are, as a matter of
practice, filed after the plea to clarify the extent of the injuries
and sequelae.
(Rules 24 and 35 would allow the defendant to obtain
further information as needed.) In the event that the plaintiff
failed
to file the reports, the matter would not be certified as
ready for trial or, if certified, would be subject to dismissal if
expert
reports were not forthcoming. Similarly, claims for
compensation for lost income and the like are left for actuaries to
assist
the Court in arriving at a just and equitable compensation.
26.
Much
of the above reasoning applies no less
in
casu
.
Although it would no doubt be preferable to plead a fully itemised
breakdown – the extent that figures are available - the
fact
that the particulars of claim may have been drawn in more precise
terms does not
ipso
facto
render
them so vague as to frustrate the plea.
[10]
Courts have rejected exceptions based on a failure to provide an
itemised breakdown of the quantum concerned. For example,
it
was held that an exception could not be said to go to the root of the
claim owing to the lack of particularity in how the damages
were
itemised since this could be cured by evidence.
[11]
27.
The latter point evokes a practical consideration
that accounts for the forgiving standard when it comes to pleading
quantum. Claims
for damages are quite often nothing more than
thumb-sucks, to use the vernacular. This is, in part, a consequence
of the fact that
precise assessments are often not available within
the time allowed to file summons. Projections of future expenses
unavoidably
have a speculative quality. And then there is the
perennial tendency to exaggerate expected medical and other expenses.
To this,
a court will often turn a blind eye - save where the sum
claimed in the first instance is so exorbitant as to suggest bad
faith.
It seems to be a pragmatic appreciation of the foregoing that
accounts for the judicial leniency one finds when it comes to
pleading
quantum in personal injury claims.
28.
None of the Defendant's other grounds of exception
go to the heart of the claim, and those deficiencies that remain may
be condoned
under the forgiving standards - some may say overly
generous - our courts have, for better or worse, applied in exception
proceedings.
29.
Some of the Defendant’s complaints simply
demand too much of the particulars of the claim. For example, it is
pointed out
that the Plaintiff refers to a duty of care but fails to
say whether the same or different duties of care are pleaded under
each
head. But court do not demand this level of subtle parsing in
particulars.
30.
It
is said also that Plaintiff fails to provide key information
regarding past and future employment. The particulars do say that
he
worked for the Defendant, lost his employment, forfeited employment
opportunities and has a reduced earning capacity. I do not
think this
renders the particulars of claim excipiable. No doubt, actuarial
information will be forthcoming as the prospects of
further
employment and income.
31.
Then, Defendant complains that Plaintiff has
failed to plead the nature and extent of the injuries. But the
particulars do, in fact,
describe the nature of the injuries and
sequela
,
albeit in a cursory and somewhat opaque fashion. As for the
Plaintiff not providing details of the disability, we have already
seen that disability
per se
has not, in fact, been alleged. (If it had
been, the High Court’s jurisdiction would have been ousted.)
32.
In the premises, I find that the Defendant’s
exception is without merit.
33.
As to costs, they shall be costs in the trial,
calculated at Scale A
in Rule 69(7) of the
Uniform Rules with respect to those incurred from 12 April 2024
onwards.
ORDER
34.
It is ordered that:
34.1.
The exception is dismissed.
34.2.
Costs shall be costs in the trial.
OSBORNE AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
[1]
Alphina
Investments Ltd v Blacher
2008
(5) SA 479
(A) at para 11.
[2]
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd
2001
(3) SA 986
(SCA) at para 7
.
[3]
Children's
Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013
(2) SA 213
(SCA) at 232C-E.
[4]
Barloworld
Logistics Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ford and Others
2019
(5) SA 133
(GJ) at para 40.
[5]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones And Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W) at p 905.
[6]
2016
JDR 2297 (GJ) at para 34.
[7]
Kahn
v Stuart
1942
CPD 386
at 391. See
Van
Wyk v FNB of South Africa Ltd
2016
BIP 44 (CP) at para 43 (defendant complaining of dearth of detail in
particulars of claim may invoke Rules 21(2) and 37(4)
and may file a
plea consisting of only bare denials).
[8]
Standard
Credit Corporation Ltd v Bester and others
1987(1)
SA 812 (W) p 820.
[9]
Minister
van Wet en Orde v Jacobs
1999
(1) SA 944 (O)
at 952I–953C.
[10]
Giant
Leap Workspace Specialists (Pty) Ltd v Scoin Trading (Pty) Ltd
2016
JDR 2297 (GJ), para 39 (“An excipient is required to show that
he will be seriously prejudiced if the exception is
not upheld.”)
[11]
Rolando
Electrical CC v Munaka General Trading (Pty) Ltd and
Others
(2011/6076)
[2015] ZAGPJHC 238 (16 October 2015) para 48.
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