Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1000South Africa
Lekote v Road Accident Fund (2016/33357) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1000 (8 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lekote v Road Accident Fund (2016/33357) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1000 (8 October 2024)
Lekote v Road Accident Fund (2016/33357) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1000 (8 October 2024)
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sino date 8 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2016/33357
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
08/10/2024
In
the matter between:
LEKOTE
PULE KENNETH
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Manoim
J
[1]
On 24 April 2015, the plaintiff was out riding on his motorcycle with
friends when a car insured by the defendant knocked
him down.
[2]
In a judgment dated 15 June 2021, the court settled the issue of
liability holding the defendant liable for 100% of any
damages he had
suffered.
[3]
This hearing then is limited to the issue of past and future loss of
earning. A separate issue of whether he has a claim
for general
damages awaits a decision of the HSPCA and is not before me.
[4]
The plaintiff is a dentist and at the time of the accident he was in
private practice. Currently he is employed as a dentist
in a
government hospital in Sebokeng.
The
trial
[5]
I heard the matter over two days from – to – In the
course of the trial the plaintiff led the evidence of
Dr Annalie
Strydom an industrial psychologist and Thandi Nape an occupational
therapist. The plaintiff also testified. The defendant
did not call
any witnesses. The defendant accepted the reports of Dr J.
Breitenbach an orthopaedic surgeon and a firm of actuaries
Risk House
Africa both of whom had been instructed by the plaintiff’s
attorneys.
Injury
suffered
[6]
As a result of the collision the plaintiff suffered a fracture to his
right patella resulting in him undergoing surgery
and having a
patellectomy on 18 May 2015. A patellectomy in layperson’s
terms is the removal of a kneecap. For the purpose
of the current
case he has been examined by three orthopaedic surgeons, two
instructed by the plaintiff’s attorneys and one
instructed by
the defendant. The most recent report and the one that the defendant
has not challenged, is by Dr Breitenbach. The
plaintiff was examined
by Dr Breitenbach seven years after the date of the accident. That
doctor noted the following:
“
He has a loss
of movement and weakness in the right knee.”
But he stated
as regards his employment that
: “He will have a degree of
restriction climbing stairs and handling heavy objects but no severe
impairment.”
[7]
He also commented on the likelihood that the plaintiff might
experience Grade II osteoarthritis in the future. This is
based on a
radiologist report which observes post traumatic Grade II OA (osteo
arthritis) of the medial tibiofemoral joint.
[8]
Dr Breitenbach notes this as a matter for future treatment. But he
does not suggest that this has any effect on his occupation.
[9]
What does appear to be established as his sequelae, either because it
is common cause or was unchallenged when the plaintiff’s
testified is the following:
a.
The
plaintiff is unable to sit or stand for prolonged periods without
experiencing pain.
b.
This
effects his occupation in the following way –
i.
Compromises his ability to perform certain procedures that
require the dentist to remain seated for prolonged periods. He
mentions
two types – root canal treatment and inserting crowns.
ii.
He testified that such procedures are more common in private
practice than in public hospitals.
iii.
These procedures in private practice are more lucrative for
dentists than more standard procedures.
[10]
Two key issues need to be addressed in relation to his claim for
future loss of earnings. The first is whether his move
from private
practice to practising in a public hospital resulted in a loss of
future earnings. Related to this question is whether
even if that
answer is in the affirmative, whether his move was caused by the
sequelae or for other reasons or might be a mixture
of both.
[11]
The second issue is whether as a result of the sequelae and the
discomfort he is experiencing the plaintiff’s normal
working
life will be curtailed. The plaintiff had told Dr Strydom that at the
time of the accident he earned R 100 000 per
month and R1.2
million annually from his dental practice. This was a net amount
after deduction of expenses.
[12]
In relation to the first issue, I find that the plaintiff has not
made out a case on this aspect. First because he has
failed to
satisfactorily prove that his pre-morbid earnings amounted to R
100 000 per month after the deduction of expenses.
[13]
It is notable that Dr Strydom had asked for financial information
from the plaintiff and despite her completing a second
report two
years later, that information was still not provided to her. Instead,
she was given some bank statements in the name
of a company called 2m
and Im Services Projects and Services Pty Ltd, for a period of some
months in 2016, but that was the sum
total of what was provided.
[14]
These bank statements do not establish any proof of earnings from the
plaintiff’s dental practice. Some entries
indicate payment from
medical aids, some large amounts of cash deposited (R 100 0000 in one
instance). The plaintiff when he testified
claimed he did not
administer the books for his own practice at the time and hence had
no better source as the proof of his earnings
than the entries into
this bank account.
[15]
Dr Strydom, correctly, did not seek to re-construct these into any
pattern but instead turned to other sources to ascertain
what one
could surmise might have been the plaintiff’s pre-morbid income
as I go on to discuss.
[16]
What none of the experts were told, but which only emerged when he
gave evidence, and I suspect surprised his own legal
team, is that
the plaintiff is still earning additional income from part-time
after-hours work, he performs for private patients.
He states that
this gives him R 20 000 to R30 000 per month. If this is
included on to his earnings from the public hospital,
as evidenced by
his payslip, this means his current earnings pre-tax exceed R 100 000
per annum.
What
needs to be decided
.
[17]
It is not disputed that the plaintiff has suffered a permanent
impairment caused by the collision. It is also not disputed
that this
impairment causes him constant pain that affects him professionally.
What is in dispute is the following: did the collision
cause him to
forsake a more lucrative career in private practice for a lower
paying position in public practice; how much does
his injury impair
his future career prospects and would it curtail its length. At
present he is aged 42.
[18]
Briefly the plaintiff’s career path is this. He qualified as a
dentist in 2010. His first job as a dentist commenced
in 2011 when he
worked for the Gauteng Department of Health as a grade 1 dentist.
[19]
In November 2014 he went to private practice working with a Dr
Matlaila. His status in that practice is a matter of dispute.
In his
evidence the plaintiff testified that he was a partner in the
practice but in his curriculum vitae (‘CV’) he
describes
himself as a locum. Put differently as per the CV he is an employee
of Dr Matlaila not a partner profit sharing. Cross
examined on this
contradiction he stated that the CV incorrectly reflected he was a
locum to suit Dr Matlaila’s tax purposes.
[20]
Given that on his evidence Dr Matlaila managed the accounts and the
plaintiff would have joined the practice early in
his career, it is
more likely he was a locum not a partner. Nor did he testify about
how the partnership was dissolved given that
he left Dr Matlaila in
October 2016 to start his own practice. Thus, at the time of the
accident (24 April 2015) it is probable
that he was still a locum
with Dr Matlaila’s practice.
[21]
He then started his own dental practice together with a partner in
October 2016. It is unclear from this evidence what
the partner
brought to the relationship – he does not appear to have been a
dentist. Things did not work out. He gives two
reasons for this –
he had to pay high rentals which meant the practice was not
sufficiently probable. But he also claims
that his partner “cheated
him”. Whatever the real reason, perhaps it is a bit of both, he
decided to relinquish his
private practice.
[22]
He returned to government employment in February 2021. He went to
work as a dentist at Sebokeng Hospital a position he
still holds. The
payslip given to Dr Strydom in 2022 shows he earned a gross annual
salary of R 84 039 per month. This includes
an amount called
fixed overtime’’. He explained this was for standard
overtime work a dentist must do on occasional
weekends and after
hours. He confirmed that he does this overtime work so this amount
can be included. However, it emerged following
questions from the
court and a fact not revealed to Dr Strydom that he also earns money
from doing private work. He estimated that
this brought in about R
20 000 to R 30 000 per month.
[23]
The first issue is what the plaintiff earned in private practice
prior to the collision. As I mentioned earlier, the
plaintiff claims
that pre-collision he was earning R 100 000 per month or R 1,2
million per year. I understand this to be
his alleged gross earnings.
However, he has been unable to prove that he earned this amount. His
own expert concedes this point.
No reason was given during his
testimony why he could not produce more satisfactory proof. It would
not have been difficult for
him to do so were this the case. Dr
Strydom did not then seek to rely on the plaintiff for proof of
earnings but instead looked
to other evidence on what dentists
typically earned in private practice according to industry surveys.
Dr Strydom referred to reports
by Koch to establish that a dentist of
his experience would have been earning between the R 368 300
(the median range) and
R 447 900 (the upper quartile range).
[24]
It is unlikely that his patients would have afforded fees that
exceeded medical aid rates given the socio-economic profile
of his
practice, so this estimate is plausible.
[25]
The one implication of this is that the plaintiff has not established
that he is earning less now than he would have
been had he been in
private practice. If he was earning R 84 000 in his government
job and was able to earn a further R 20 000
to R 30 000 per
month in his ‘side’ private practice, then he was earning
more than when he was full time in private
practice. One also needs
to keep in mind that a private practice is subject to fluctuations
whilst a government sector job gives
the employee security and a
pension.
[26]
I must also consider the evidence of the occupational therapist Ms
Nape. Her evidence comes in the form of her reports
and her viva voce
evidence. Ms Nape sought to establish that the plaintiff’s
earning capacity was compromised because he
could not work for long
hours nor perform certain procedures. But Ms Nape was correctly
criticised in cross-examination for straying
into areas for which she
had no expertise (thus contradicting what Dr Breitenbach had stated
about the plaintiff’s condition)
and exaggerating the extent
that the plaintiff’s injuries had constrained his earning
capacity.
[27]
Notably Ms Nape would have been unaware that the plaintiff was still
doing private work and working overtime for the
hospital. This is his
current situation nine years after the accident. Rather I will rely
on the plaintiff’s own testimony
of what he can no longer do
without pain. He testified that certain treatments – he
mentioned root canals and inserting crowns
– were difficult for
him as it required him to sit for long periods of time causing him
pain as he needs to stand up. However,
there is no indication that
this has had any impact on his earnings or if it has, it was never
quantified. He did not attempt to
do so. Moreover, Ms Nape’s
thesis that he was forced post-accident to move to government
practice is not supported by his
own evidence. Indeed, he also
testified that he is motivated to give back to his community
something that working in the public
sector enables him to do. This
aspect of his altruism is missing from her account but was given in
testimony to the court.
[28]
She also made sweeping and unfounded remarks about the plaintiff now
being more exposed to malpractice suits because
of his compromised
health. He made no such claim in his testimony. If this was the case
doubtless, he would have said so since
he testified after she had.
[29]
My conclusion is that Ms Nape was an unreliable and partial witness
whose evidence falls to be rejected.
Calculations
[30]
The plaintiff has reduced his original claim by relying on the
figures submitted by his actuary but with a large contingency.
Whilst
originally claiming an amount of R 600 000 in terms of an amended
plea this amount was increased to R R11 486 008.00. The
plaintiff’s
legal team now relies on a figure of R2 710 337.70
[31]
At the conclusion of the trial the difference between the parties on
the calculation of future and past loss of earnings
is not extensive.
As noted, the plaintiff now claims an amount of R2 710 337.70. This
is considerably down from the amount of R11
486 008.00 originally
claimed in terms of an amendment to its particulars of claim dated 26
September 2018.
[32]
Both parties have relied on the two scenarios supplied by the
plaintiffs actuaries in a report dated 11 August 2022.
Both these
scenarios in turn rely on assumptions emanating from the report of Dr
Strydom.
[33]
The plaintiff has chosen what is termed scenario A. Under this
scenario the assumption was made that the plaintiff would
have
remained self-employed and earned at the levels he claimed he did.
Following a conventional approach to the loss and assuming
a
retirement age of 65, and after applying the RAF Amendment Cap, the
actuary came to a loss of earnings figure of R 3 404.607
(Here
contingencies of 13% for uninjured income, and 33% for injured
income, were applied.)
[34]
In final argument plaintiff’s legal team conscious of the new
evidence led by the plaintiff in particular, viz.
his additional
private earnings adopted the approach of taking the scenario A figure
of the actuary but increasing the contingencies
to reduce the amount
claimed to R2 710 337.70. Most of this figure is for past loss (R 2
232 708.70) with only R 477 629.00 for
net future loss.
[35]
The defendant has used scenario B posited by the plaintiff’s
actuary as its starting point. The assumption here
is that the
plaintiff would have followed a government career from February 2021.
Here the actuary arrives at a figure of R4,498,763.
The defendant
based on this figure applied contingencies and got to a figure of R
973 74907. However, according to the actuarial
report, on
scenario B, most of the quantum was made up of past income which
amounted to R1 085 942. The defendant has not
included this
amount because the defendant argues he has failed to prove he
suffered a past loss of income.
[36]
But although the plaintiffs actuary appears to rely on Dr Strydom’s
report to find a past loss of income on her
scenario B it is unclear
how he came to this figure. For this reason, I consider it more
reliable to go back to what she stated
in her report.
[37]
She observed that after having the accident in April 2015 the
plaintiff returned to work in December 2015. Given that
he has not
proved his earnings I will follow Dr Strydom’s suggestion and
use the figures supplied by Koch. Taking the most
generous amount of
the highest quartile of earnings this amounted to R447,900 per annum.
Assuming then an absence form work of
seven months (April to
December) plus making an allowance of earnings to pick up over the
next few months, whilst he regained patients,
I will recognise a
years’ earnings as past earnings in this amount. Apart from
this I do not consider there is sufficient
evidence to show that the
plaintiff lost earnings for the remainder of the period until the
actuary did his calculation. This again
is because of his own
evidence. Here the plaintiff has failed to make out a case that he
was forced to leave more lucrative private
practice because of his
injury. Rather his own difficulties in private practice were caused
by his relationship with his erstwhile
partners, and his difficulties
in managing his dental practice when he was the principal.
[38]
But this was not his only difficulty. He also had difficulty was I
mentioned earlier in proving his income. Thus, apart
from where it
was common cause that he was absent from work (the seven months) his
remaining case for past loss of income suffers
from these two flaws.
[39]
For future earnings I consider the amount proposed by the defendant
of R 973 749.07 is reasonable. This gives a total
of R 1 201 559.07,
calculated as follows;
Past
loss:
R 447,900
Past loss Capped
R 227 810
[1]
Future loss:
R 973 749.07
Total:
R 1 201 559.07
Costs
[40]
As far as costs are concerned the normal order of party and party
cost is adequate. I will allow qualifying fees for
the following
experts. Dr J Breytenbach, Dr A. Strydom and Risk House Actuaries. I
do not consider that the evidence of Ms Nape
added anything to
helping decide this matter and hence I have not provided for her
qualifying fees.
ORDER:-
[41] In the result
the following order is made:
1. The defendant
shall pay to the plaintiff the capital amount of
R 1 201 559.07
for loss of earnings arising out of a motor vehicle collision which
occurred on the 24 April 2015, such amount payable on or before
180
(One Hundred and Eighty) days from the date of this order into the
Trust Account for Plaintiff's attorneys of record.
2. The
determination of general damages is postponed sine die.
3. Payment shall be
made directly into the Plaintiff attorney’s trust account,
details of which are as follows:
ACCOUNT HOLDER
: M[…] M & A[…] I[...]
ACCOUNT NUMBER
: 6[…]
BANK
: F[…] N[..] B[..]
BRANCH
: C[…] A[…] S[…] C[…]
BRANCH
CODE
: 2[…]
4. The defendant
shall make payment of the Plaintiff’s agreed or taxed party and
party High Court costs
(Scale B)
of the action to date of this
order attendant upon the obtaining of payment of the amount referred
to in paragraph 1 above, costs
of counsel and including the
qualifying, reservation and/or preparation fees if any, of the
plaintiff’s experts:
4.1. Dr Breytenbach
(Orthopaedic Surgeon):
4.2. Dr A.C Strydom
(Industrial Psychologist)
4.3. Risk House
Africa (Actuary)
5. The Plaintiff
shall in the event costs are not agreed:
5.1. Serve the
notice of taxation on the Defendant’s attorney of record, and
5.2. The Plaintiff
shall allow the Defendant 14 (fourteen) court days to make payment of
the taxed court days;
5.3. The Plaintiff
shall in the event of costs not being agreed upon, serve the notice
of taxation on the Defendant.
6.
The Defendant shall pay interest on the
taxed or agreed costs fourteen (14) days from the date of agreement
or taxation of costs
to date of payment. The interest payable shall
be calculated at the prescribed rate of interest applicable at the
date of agreement
of costs or taxation of costs.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 04
September 2024
Date of Judgment: 08
October 2024
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
M
H Mokale
Instructed
by.
Mkwanazi
M & Associates Inc
Counsel
for the Respondents:
D
Sondlela
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
[1]
This
was the cap in 2015 as per the actuary’s report.
sino noindex
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