Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1316South Africa
Ndlovu v The Road Accident Fund (1970/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1316 (19 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ndlovu v The Road Accident Fund (1970/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1316 (19 September 2024)
Ndlovu v The Road Accident Fund (1970/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1316 (19 September 2024)
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sino date 19 September 2024
SAFLII
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personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 1970/2020
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
SUTHERLAND
DJP
NOMPUMELELO
FLORENCE NDLOVU
PLAINTIFF
v
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
This Judgment has been
delivered by uploading to the digital data case of the High Court of
South Africa, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
on 19 September 2024 at
14h00 and by email to the parties.
THE
ORDER
1.
The Defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff the sum
of R847,000 as compensation for delictual damages sustained in a
motor vehicle
collision that occurred on the 15
th
of October 2016, in settlement of the Plaintiff’s claims in
respect of past medical expenses and loss of earnings.
2.
The Plaintiff’s claim in respect of general
damages is postponed
sine die.
3.
The capital amount referred to in paragraph 1
above, shall be paid by the Defendant directly into the trust account
of Andrew Meldrum
Attorneys Incorporated, the attorney of record of
the Plaintiff as specified hereunder:-
A[…] M[…]
A[…] I[…] T[…] A[…]
First National Bank
W[…] P[…]
Branch
Account number:
6[…]
Branch code:
2[…]
4. The Defendant
shall pay interest on the amount referred to in paragraph 1 (one)
above at the rate of 11.75%
per annum
as from 14 (fourteen)
days from the date of the final Court order to date of final payment.
5.
The
Defendant is ordered in terms of
section
17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
, to reimburse the
Plaintiff for the costs of any future accommodation of the Plaintiff
in a hospital or nursing home, or treatment
or rendering of service
to her or supplying goods to her arising out of injuries sustained by
Plaintiff in the motor vehicle accident
which occurred on the 15
October 2016, after such costs have been incurred and upon proof
thereof.
6. The Defendant
shall pay the Plaintiff’s taxed or agreed costs to date of
action on the party and party High Court
Scale B, such costs to
include the following:
6.1 the costs of
obtaining the following expert medico-legal reports and/or addendum
reports and/or serious injury assessment
forms:
6.1.1 Dr Colin
Barlin – Orthopaedic Surgeon;
6.1.2 Anne
Reynolds – Occupational Therapist;
6.1.3 Kim Kaveburg
– Occupational Therapist;
6.1.4 Elna
Roussouw – Industrial Psychologist;
6.1.5 Prof. John
Ouma – Neurosurgeon;
6.1.6 Arch
Actuarial Consultants – Actuary.
6.2 The reservation
fees and preparation of the costs (including the preparation of joint
minutes) if any, and as allowed
by the Taxing Master, of the
Plaintiff’s expert witnesses as set out above.
6.3 The cost of
Counsel.
7. In the event
that costs are not agreed the Plaintiff shall serve the notice of
taxation on the Defendant or its attorneys
of record and the
Defendant shall be allowed a period of 14 (fourteen) court days to
make payment of the taxed costs.
JUDGMENT
SUTHERLAND
DJP:
[1]
The Plaintiff, Nompelelo Florance Ndlovu, seeks
damages from the Defendant, the Road Accident Fund (RAF). She was a
passenger in
a vehicle when on 16 October 2016 she sustained the
injuries upon which he claim is based. She was then 45 years of age.
[2]
The RAF acknowledges liability for 100% of the
proven damages. An undertaking in terms of
section 17(11)
of the
Road
Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
has been given in respect of future
medical expenses. The claim for general damages was referred for a
serious injury assessment
which was declared to not be serious. This
Judgment does not address the question of general damages.
[3]
In dispute remain the computation of the quantum
of:
3.1.
Past medical expenses
3.2.
Past loss of income
3.3.
Future loss of earning capacity.
[4]
All of the evidence was adduced on affidavit
pursuant
Rule 38(2)
of the Uniform rules of Court. These affidavits
included the plaintiff, her employer Ms Casey Sparks and the several
medical practitioners
and an industrial psychologist, as listed in
the order. The RAF adduced no evidence. The body of evidence on
affidavit stands unrebutted.
[5]
The injuries were severe enough for the plaintiff
to be hospitalised for a fortnight. Her cervical neck and her lower
back suffered
flexion extension injuries. Her right arm and shoulder
and right leg were also injured. There was no evidence of a head
injury.
The long-term sequelae relate to the neck and back injuries.
Subsequently she was treated by physiotherapy and returned to work
as
a domestic servant.
[6]
The claim for past medical expenses is founded on
series of vouchers to a physiotherapist and confirmed by Ms Sparks.
The sum claimed
is R 5424.00. The documentation was submitted to the
RAF in July 2023, 14 months before this hearing. The attorney
for the
RAF informed me that he is still awaiting the RAF to confirm
an acceptance. As there is no rebuttal to offer and the basis for the
claim is proven, this head of damages is proven in the sum of R5464.
[7]
The further claims have been articulated as being
for past and future loss of earnings.
[8]
The claim for what is called ‘past’
earnings is in truth a segment of the claim for future loss as
initially computed
as at 2020, four years ago but which because of
the delay in coming before a court was overtaken by such delay. An
amount of R23,253
is claimed. This sum is capable of exact
computation by reference to pay slips and UIF payments being the
obvious sources of information.
Some recent payslips from 2022
onwards are adduced but proof of UIF payments, which in any event
ought, strictly speaking, to have
been reflected on the pay slips.
Because the loss is related to periods of indisposition during which,
allegedly, the plaintiff
suffered reduced earnings, the sum proposed
to the court is properly explained. I am satisfied some loss could
probably occur,
based on the unrebutted affidavit evidence, but the
computation is unsatisfactory. The computation appears to be
based mostly
on extrapolations from remarks made to the various
expert witnesses. That is not good enough. Moreover, despite the
claim that
her rate of pay has been reduced this is not apparent from
such objective evidence as is available eg, she earned R5000 per
month
in 2016 and R7000 in 2024 a trajectory which is in keeping with
the general rate of inflation. For these reasons, in my view, it
is
inappropriate to accept this figure as reliable. The head of damages
is unproven in the sum claimed but it is appropriate to
make some
award. Had the RAF fulfilled its function the uncertainty would not
exist. On the premise of being even handed between
the parties I
propose an arbitrary sum of R10,000.
[9]
As to the future loss of earning capacity, the
basic facts, as set out in the several expert reports from the
practitioners, show
that the plaintiff has indeed suffered a
diminution of her capacity to work as a domestic servant in a private
residence. Domestic
work is generally regarded as medium grade work
as distinct from light or heavy work. Reference is appropriately made
to the need
for her, from time to time, to lift heavy objects, and do
much bending, stopping, stretching up and down and so forth. These
movements
are essential to activities in such species of work. The
plaintiff’s arthritic cervical neck and back are directly
implicated
in these manoeuvres. She suffers from chronic pain. The
visits to a physiotherapist attest to that. She has become depressed,
in
part from her physical condition and in part from the anxiety
derived from a fear of losing her job because she can perform only
sub-optimally. Ms Sparks has been a sympathetic employer who has made
generous accommodation for the plaintiff’s limitations
for the
past 8 years, including, the routine days of work being reduced from
5 to 3 per week since February 2024. This arrangement
is not
sustainable indefinitely.
[10]
The initial medical view was that the plaintiff
would sacrifice 5 years of a working life and retire early at age 60.
In 2024, at
the time of the hearing, she is 53 years of age. This
view emanates essentially from Dr Barlin, the orthopod. His
report
is dated 2 March 2020 – four years after the accident. A
year earlier he had – unmotivated – expressed the view
that she could sensibly retire at age 58. Her condition in 2020 was
such that she had chronic pain and tenderness in the affected
areas.
The prognosis was treatment by physiotherapy and pain killers. Dr
Barlin thought her productivity was reduced by 10%.
[11]
A neurosurgeon Prof Ouma examined her on 22 April
2021 – 5 years after the accident. Prof Ouma noted the report
of a supposed
stroke in 2018 with some incredulity. He did
nonetheless note a loss of power and sensation on the rightside of
her body. He opined
that the HIV positive status might explain the
ostensible stroke-like symptoms. His major findings for present
purposes is related
to headaches linked to a possible concussion
during the accident, based on her report of such an event. As alluded
to, no record
of a head injury at the time of the accident exists. As
a result, the headaches cannot be attributed to the accident.
Unhappily,
the medical evidence does not address the possibility that
the headaches are a form of referred pain from her chronic arthritic
neck.
[12]
The latest view expressed is that of Ms E A
Rossouw an Industrial Phycologist whose report is dated 9 September
2024. Ms Rossouw
contends that the plaintiff is at present in such a
condition of discomfort that she is ‘unemployable’ and
should cease
work now. This is supported in general terms by an
occupational therapist Ms Kim Kaveburg.
[13]
These views suffer from a lack of support from
the orthopaedic expert Dr Barlin. Moreover, the fact that for the
past eight years
the plaintiff has worked, and continues to do,
would require more substantiation to establish convincingly, on
the
eve of a hearing, that her condition has so radically
deteriorated. I express my scepticism about these conclusions, which
I regard
as exaggerated when compared with the objective evidence
available.
[14]
The plaintiff’s present overall condition
cannot plausibly be attributed exclusively to the persistent neck
shoulder and back
pain. In particular, in 2018 she experienced what
is opined to be a mild stroke but was probably something less
hazardess.
Regrettably, no serious attempt has been made to
disaggregate her present condition to link it or unlink it from that
occurrence.
I am left to make do with that lacuna. On behalf the
plaintiff, I am invited to allow a 25 % contingency to accommodate
the overall
uncertainties including her conditions as influenced by
that supposed stroke, and no less by her HIV positive status. This
approach
takes the exercise in the rough and ready zone.
[15]
The contribution on behalf the RAF was to take up
the stance that the court should assume a reduced work life of 5
years and multiply
the plaintiffs present annual earnings of R90,000
by 5 and deduct a 15 % contingency. This yields a sum of about
R450,000. I took
this submission as being seriously made. It warrants
no further comment nor attention.
[16]
The actuary has presented two computations. The
rate of income both in 2016 and at present are correctly noted. The
methodology
of computation is not challenged. He allows a 15%
contingency, rather than the 25% now proposed on behalf of the
plaintiff. The
difference in the two computations of the actuary is
dictated by the unemployability contended for as described above as
distinct
from the loss of 5 years of working life.
[17]
In the former computation, given in 2021 and
later revised, the sum is presented as R696,054. On the latest
approach, ie, immediate
unemployability, the sum being sought by the
plaintiff, excluding the other two heads of damages, is R806,817. In
my view, the
former computation stands on firmer objective grounds;
ie the premise is that articulated by Dr Barlin.
[18]
Nevertheless, the factor which warrants
considerable weight is the plaintiffs market credibility. It is
manifest that she is seriously
uncompetitive were her present
employer to dispense with her services. This prognostication posits
that she could work at the same
performance levels but that nobody is
likely to want to employ her. On these grounds the unemployability
thesis is on firmer ground
than the exaggerations alluded to above.
Moreover, again, were there to be some doubt, the abject
dereliction by the RAF
to perform its function offers no
alternative concrete scenario to pit against the thesis.
[19]
The R5464 for past medicals should be added to
the sum payable. The ‘past’ component of lost earnings in
a sum of R10,000
must be added to the sum payable.
[20]
This calculation leads me to propose an overall
sum, rounded up:- R830,817 plus R5464 plus R10,000 = R
846281 > R
847,000.
[21]
As regards costs, having regard to the issues I
am of the view that scale B is appropriate. It was contended that the
rigours of
cajoling the RAF into doing its job warranted a higher
scale but, despite my despair at the unprofessional conduct of
the
RAF, this is not an always an appropriate way to address its
shortcomings.
[22]
The contingency fee agreement of 20 July 2024 is
declared applicable.
[23]
Accordingly, the order set out above is hereby
made.
ROLAND SUTHERLAND
DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT
GAUTENG, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
Date
of hearing: 18 September 2024
Date
of Judgment: 19 September 2024
For
the Plaintiff: Adv. J.L. Khan
instructed by Andrew Meldrum Attorneys Inc.
For
the Defendant: Mr. E.M. Mdlovu instructed by State Attorney
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