Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1093South Africa
Rand Mutual Assurance Company Limited v Gore (A5045/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1093 (22 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 October 2024
Headnotes
Gore’s appeal and dismissed RMA’s cross appeal. The material terms of the order were:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rand Mutual Assurance Company Limited v Gore (A5045/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1093 (22 October 2024)
Rand Mutual Assurance Company Limited v Gore (A5045/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1093 (22 October 2024)
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sino date 22 October 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: A5045/2022
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3) REVISED:
YES
/NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
22/10/2024
In
the matter between:
RAND
MUTUAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Applicant
and
GORE
VINCENT
CHARLES
Respondent
In
re:
GORE
VINCENT
CHARLES
Appellant
and
RAND
MUTUAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Respondent
JUDGMENT ON LEAVE TO
APPEAL
Manoim
J (Maier-Frawley J and Allen AJ concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal a decision a full court
has made in this
matter.
[2]
The matter had come to the full court as an appeal from a decision of
a tribunal constituted
in terms of the Compensation for Occupational
Injuries and Diseases Act 130 of 1993 (“COIDA”), COIDA
Act. Briefly
put, the employee, Vincent Charles Gore, had
appealed to the Tribunal against a decision made by the respondent,
Rand Mutual Assurance
Limited (“RMA”), reducing his
compensation.
[3]
The reason why RMA is the respondent is that it is the entity
licensed in terms of
section 30 of COIDA to assess and make claims in
respect of compensation. It was thus the licensed entity relevant to
the claim
made by Gore whose accident occurred in July 1996.
[4]
RMA made three assessments in relation to Gore. The first, what we
have termed the
“original award”, was made in August
1997. Years later, at the instance of Gore, RMA reviewed the original
award and
made a new award which we have referred to as the ‘revised
award’. The revised award increased the compensation to Gore
from that in the original award. But Gore again approached RMA
because he queried the computation of the revised award. But instead
of doing so, RMA concluded that the revised award was based on
erroneous information and decided not only to refuse him increased
compensation but overturned the revised award with one providing for
much lower compensation. This has been referred to as the
“reduced
award” (or “deprivation decision”) and was made in
December 2014.
[5]
Gore then decided to object to this award. In terms of COIDA an
‘affected person’
may object to an award made by the
Director-General, or in this case, the relevant mutual association,
the RMA. The objection is
then heard by a tribunal constituted in
terms of COIDA. There is no dispute between the parties that this is
the correct process
to be followed. What is in dispute is whether
Gore, as the affected person, brought his objection timeously. This
point was raised
by RMA before the tribunal which dismissed it.
Nevertheless, the tribunal also dismissed Gore’s objection on
the merits.
He then appealed in terms of COIDA to the full court. RMA
then cross-appealed the tribunal’s decision to dismiss its
argument
that the objection was lodged out of time.
[6]
The full court upheld Gore’s appeal and dismissed RMA’s
cross appeal.
The material terms of the order were:
a.
The order of the tribunal dismissing the appellant's objection
to the respondent's rejection of his claim for compensation is set
aside and is replaced with the following order: "The
respondent's revised award, evidenced by its letter of 30 April 2013,
is reinstated with retrospective effect.
b.
The cross-appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs
of two counsel.
[7]
RMA now seeks leave to appeal both the full courts’ decision to
uphold the appeal
and to dismiss its cross-appeal. Gore opposes leave
being granted in respect of both.
Is leave to appeal
required from a full court?
[8]
The first issue the full court had to decide is whether it was
necessary to get leave
to appeal a full court decision from the full
court. Such leave is not required when the full court has determined
an appeal from
a single judge in the High Court. In such an instance,
the party seeking to appeal does not seek leave from the full court
but
must instead, by way of special leave, petition the Supreme Court
of Appeal. (“SCA”) This is in terms of section 16(1)(b)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, (“the ‘Act’”).
However, the Act is silent on whether the full court
is required to
hear an application for leave to appeal, when the original appeal
came to it from a statutory tribunal, as it did
in the present case,
or whether such leave is also by way of petition to the SCA.
[9]
The situation was clarified recently, in
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd and Another
2020
(3) SA 390
SCA, where Wallis JA
held that section
16(1)(b) of the Act, does not apply to appeals to the full court from
statutory tribunals. Hence in such an instance,
he held, leave of the
full court is required.
[10]
Although that decision dealt with a different statutory tribunal, it
was common cause that this
court is bound by this decision and hence
it is competent for RMA to approach this full court for leave to
appeal.
Basis of the appeal
[11]
Although the notice of appeal is lengthy – sixteen pages - Mr
Hulley, who appeared for
RMA, succinctly reduced the issues to three
points. Two relate to the upholding of the appeal and the third
relates to the dismissal
of the cross-appeal. Since the cross-appeal
point, if successful, would dispose of the matter, I deal with it
first.
Cross- appeal
[12]
In terms of the cross-appeal, RMA contended that the objection that
served before the tribunal
was lodged out of time. RMA argues that
the objection should have been lodged within 180 days of the decision
by RMA to reduce
Gore’s compensation. Since the decision
objected to was made on 12 December 2014, the objection should have
been lodged by
8 June 2015, but it was only lodged on 29 September
2017.
[13]
It is common cause that the objection was not lodged within 180 days.
This point was argued by
RMA before the tribunal, but it nevertheless
granted condonation for the late filing. On appeal to the full court,
this court upheld
the tribunal’s decision on this point, and
dismissed the cross-appeal.
[14]
Two issues are raised in the leave to appeal on this aspect. First
RMA argues that the 180-day
period is mandatory and cannot be
condoned. Second, that even if there is a power to condone, on the
facts, no condonation should
have been granted.
[15]
The relevant provision in COIDA is section 91(1), which states:
“
Any person
affected by a decision of the Director-General or a trade union or
employer's organization of which that person was a
member at the
relevant time may, within 180 days after such decision, lodge an
objection against that decision with the commissioner
in the
prescribed manner.”
[16]
RMA argues that the “
may
” in this section only
applies to the right to lodge an objection. It argues that it is
drafted in this way because a person
with a right to object is not
obliged to object. Hence the use of the permissive ‘may’.
However, RMA argues, the 180-day
period is peremptory. On its reading
of the section, it must be interpreted as follows: an affected person
may object, but if they
do, they must do so in 180 days.
[17]
Of course, the section has not been drafted in this way. RMA’s
response has been to argue
against the contrary interpretation - that
if there was a power to condone the late filing of the objection -
the legislature would
have catered for this specifically, but it has
not done so. Absent such a clear indication, so the argument goes,
the period of
180 days is peremptory and cannot be condoned.
[18]
The full court in its main decision has dealt with this issue and
explained why this section
must be interpreted to allow a discretion
to a court to condone a late filing. This interpretation is one
consistent with protecting
an objector’s right of access to the
court. But even, if at best for RMA, there is some ambiguity, as the
Constitutional
Court held in
Pickfords,
where there are two possible interpretations of a statute, both of
which limit the right of access to the courts, one “…
must
consider
which of
these two interpretations would better promote the spirit, purport
and objects of the Bill of Rights and constitute a lesser
infringement on the right in s 34 of the Constitution.”
[1]
Whilst in
Pickfords
the Court was dealing with a provision in the Competition Act that
limited the time period in which a complaint for anticompetitive
conduct could be lodged, the principle enunciated is of general
application. The court there distinguished between absolute
substantive
time bars and procedural time bars, preferring the latter
as it was more constitutionally compliant than the former. (Having
decided
that the provision could be interpreted as a procedural time
bar, the court went on to consider condonation.)
[19]
Applying that principle to the current matter, the interpretation
least limiting of access to
the courts is the one adopted in the main
decision. For this reason, the reading offered, that the section
affords a power to condone,
is not a decision that another court
would decide otherwise.
[20]
As far as the facts on condonation are concerned, I do not consider
that another court would
overturn the finding of the full court on
this point. There is no dispute that for the purposes of section
91(1), the reference
to a decision by the director-general can be
understood to be the decision made by RMA. The decision in this case
that was the
subject of the objection was what we have termed the
reduced award. Within one month of being notified of this award, Gore
wrote
a letter to the chairperson of the RMA asking for it to be
reconsidered.
[2]
Granted, this
letter probably did not comply with the formalities of COIDA, and
hence was arguably not in the prescribed manner.
But as a factor in
considering condonation, it is relevant to show that Gore acted
timeously and diligently to vindicate his right
to appeal.
[21]
Thereafter, in response to this letter, the process was diverted at
the suggestion of RMA, to
a possible arbitration, in January 2015.
For reasons that are common cause the arbitration process was never
concluded, and Gore
then, whilst the arbitration process was pending,
filed his notice of objection with the tribunal. This notice was only
filed on
29 September 2017. Yet in response, RMA, in a letter to
Gore’s representative’, dated 3 October 2017, still urged
that
the arbitration process be continued. Various delays plagued
this process until in late 2019, the arbitrator concluded that he
lacked jurisdiction to determine the dispute.
[22]
RMA correctly concedes that this time period – the interregnum
caused by the arbitration
diversion - should not be taken into
account in assessing the time period. But it says Gore is still
unreasonably late, even subtracting
this period from the time that
had elapsed. However, this ignores the following facts: his attempt
to commence the process earlier
(within one month of being notified
of the deprivation decision); that the period of delay was not
unreasonable once the arbitration
diversion period is subtracted, and
that his prospects of success were strong. Gore after all was
appealing a deprivation decision
that had taken away benefits that
the RMA had agreed to give him two years earlier. It was not simply a
decision not to increase
his benefit – its real sting was to
remove a previous benefit. All this is relevant to condonation. I do
not consider that
another court would decide otherwise.
The
court erred in finding that the appeal to it had been brought in
terms of section 91(5)(a)(iii) of COIDA
[23]
The full court found that the appeal had been brought in terms of two
sections of COIDA, being
subsections 91(5) (i) and (iii). These
state:
“
Any person
affected by a decision referred to in subsection (3)(a), may appeal
to any provincial or local division of the Supreme
Court having
jurisdiction against a decision regarding—
(i) The interpretation
of this Act or any other law;
(ii) …
(iii) the question
whether the amount of any compensation awarded is so excessive or so
inadequate that the award thereof could
reasonably have been made
;
[24]
RMA seeks to make two points here. First that the notice of appeal to
this full court did not
refer to sub-section 91(5)(a) (iii) , which
was the sub-section the full court relied on to order the relief. The
argument was
that the appeal was confined to 91(5)(i) which meant the
full court did not have the power to substitute. It argues that the
matter
should have been referred back to the tribunal. However, the
notice of appeal refers to section 91(5)(a) – i.e. the entire
section. The fact that it did not in a piecemeal fashion itemise the
relief sought by citing each sub-section is an argument based
on pure
formalism.
[3]
There could have
been no confusion as to what was being sought. RMA was well aware of
this and came prepared to meet this argument.
Indeed, express
reference was made to both sub-sections at the outset of the argument
presented by Mr Pearce (representing Mr Gore)
at the hearing of the
appeal.
[25]
Once it is clear that the full court could act in terms of subsection
91(5)(a)(iii) the question
then is whether it was correct to
substitute its decision for that of the Tribunal. This is explained
in the judgment. There was
little point in sending the matter back to
the tribunal. The full court relied on an amount set out in a letter
from Gore’s
employer Goldfields to RMA, not its own
calculations.
[4]
Moreover, RMA
had itself applied the same amount to arrive at what we termed the
revised award. It then implemented the revised
award for some time,
until it made the deprivation decision that led to it adopting the
reduced award. It is now twelve years since
the revised award was
made, and twenty eight years since Gore’s accident. The letter
relied on was submitted at the time
by Goldfields, who were by then
the new owner of the mine. It is wholly unlikely that if the matter
was referred back any new evidence
could be produced by Goldfields.
Moreover, after waiting for 12 years only to go through a further
round of hearings would be substantial
injustice to Gore. Given this
background the full courts’ decision to substitute, was
entirely appropriate and accords with
the principles for substitution
set out by the Constitutional Court in
Trencon
.
[5]
Incorrect
interpretation of section 51 of COIDA
[26]
This third argument goes to heart of the appeal. Gore’s
compensation was based on him being
permanently disabled. The
relevant section which deals with this is section 51 of COIDA. RMA
seeks to found its leave to appeal
on the basis that the full court
erred in its interpretation of section 51, and alternatively, erred
as a matter of fact in relying
on a figure provided by Goldfields
which was itself based on an error of fact.
[27]
Section 51 of COIDA deals with compensation for permanent disablement
for persons who are either
an employee in training (51(1)(a)) or were
under 26 at the time of the accident (51(1)(b).
[28]
Each of these two subsections then provides for a further option
based on whether the person
had a further five years’
experience. Put differently, section 51 provides for four paths to
compensation. Since because
of the accident, the employee never
follows these paths, compensation is derived by considering the
position of someone who is
a proxy for the employee if he/she had
followed one of the four paths. The argument advanced by RMA is that
these paths are to
be understood as distinctive. It argues that
contrary to this approach the full court’s decision has read
the one sub-section
conjunctively and not disjunctively. But the full
court has not done so.
[29]
The court appreciated the distinction between the four paths to
compensation and discusses them
at length. As noted in the decision:
“
For purposes of
determining the appellant's compensation within the context of the
mining engineering profession, the earnings of
the following four
different proxies ought to have been considered by the respondent
when reviewing the revised award, for purposes
of arriving at the
reduced award, and the most favourable outcome applied.”
[30]
There is thus no interpretive difference between what the full court
found is the correct interpretation
of the section and what RMA
contends. As Mr Pearce for Gore pointed out, this argument on the law
is moot.
[31]
The next argument advanced by RMA was that regardless of its
interpretation the full court had
erred in its choice of proxy. RMA
argues for two possible errors. The first error is what I call the
‘qualification error’.
The proxy chosen, it argues, was
on the facts a person more qualified than someone who is recently
qualified. The second error
is that even if that was not the case,
the proxy chosen was someone who was both recently qualified and with
five years more experience
in that position. Since this resulted from
an elision of two distinct paths in section 51(2)(a) (you had to be
either, not both)
I will refer to this as the elision error.
[32]
I briefly reprise the key facts on this before I discuss the
criticism further.
[33]
At the time of the accident Gore was a 25-year-old engineer. He had
still to complete a professional
exam, but had he done so and thus
become a recently qualified person, he would have been classified as
a sectional engineer. RMA
accepts that he would have been a sectional
engineer.
[34]
Granted there was some debate in the hearings over whether he would
have qualified to be a resident
engineer, a more senior position and
hence one better remunerated than that of a sectional engineer. But
the full court did not
find that he would have become a resident
engineer. Nevertheless, the notice of appeal says this is what the
full court did, but
there is no basis for this assertion. The full
court based its decision on the lower figure in the Goldfields letter
which states
clearly that this was the compensation for a ‘sectional
engineer’. The relevant sentence in the letter, which is quoted
in the full court’s decision, and which I quote again makes
this clear:
“
The salary
determined for a
sectional engineer
which he
would have got had he obtained his Certificate of competency ( which
he was busy obtaining) would have been R 11 118.65”
(
Emphasis provided)
[35]
In oral argument Mr Hulley did not press the point that the full
court had concluded that Gore
would have been a resident engineer.
Despite this his argument was that the full court had read the
sub-section conjunctively not
disjunctively. The court, he argued,
found that Gore was both recently qualified and with five years more
experience. Since these
are two separate paths Gore had to qualify
under one or the other, not both. Put more simply his proxy could not
be someone who
is both a sectional engineer (recently qualified –
the first path) and one also with five-years’ experience (the
second
path). Hence, he argued that there had been an error of law
and fact, what I referred to earlier as the ‘elision error’.
[36]
But this is not what Goldfields’ letter states – it makes
no mention of him reaching
R 11 118.65 only after five more years as
a sectional engineer. To get around this difficulty RMA has tried to
argue that Goldfields
had based its decision on the wrong proxy.
[37]
RMA sought to rely on a payslip in the record for a Mr Swanepoel, a
resident engineer, who it
alleged had been used as the proxy for
Gore’s compensation. But this is not correct on the facts.
Swanepoel’s remuneration
only became a factor when RMA had
requested his payslip at the time it made the later reduced order. It
was not relied on, nor
did Gore furnish it, when it made the earlier
revised order – the decision the full court has given effect
to. RMA during
argument at the appeal suggested that Gore had misled
the tribunal by relying on Swanepoel’s earnings. In the leave
to appeal,
RMA no longer points the finger at Gore for this reliance
on Swanepoel, but now argues that it was Goldfields that was in
error,
and hence the award of compensation was based on its erroneous
understanding.
[38]
But RMA has no evidence for this argument. The sum total of evidence
for this is based on a payslip
for Swanepoel in February 1996 which
describes him as “resident engineer” and appears to show
a payslip evidencing
an amount R12 346.00 as his ‘normal
salary’. Since this figure is close to the R 11 118.65 proxy
used by Goldfields
in its letter, RMA deduces that Swanepoel is the
proxy and because he was a resident engineer as indicated on the
payslip, he is
the wrong proxy.
[39]
But this is not correct on the facts. As Gore’s counsel points
out, the accident took place
in July 1996, not February 1996. The
relevant payslip for comparison from Swanepoel must then be what he
received in July 1996.
In July 1996 he by then received a ‘normal
salary’ of R13 087. But this was not the figure that the full
court has
relied on. The court relied on the lower figure of R 11
118.65. To repeat, this figure is the earning of a sectional not a
resident
engineer.
[40]
This leaves as the last issue, regardless of Swanepoel, whether this
figure represents the earnings
of a sectional engineer who
additionally had five years’ experience. The Goldfields’
letter is the best evidence in
the record and makes no mention that
this was the earnings of a sectional engineer with five years’
experience. On
the contrary the language suggests it is the
salary of a recently qualified sectional engineer. RMA did not lead
any contrary evidence
on this point. Its sole witness during the
tribunal hearing was someone from its claims department. But as the
full court noted,
he had no knowledge as to “
how the revised
award had been computed or how the reduced award was calculated
”.
[41]
There is no reasonable prospect that another court would decide
differently on the facts before
the full court. The law was correctly
applied to the facts.
Conclusion
[42]
The three grounds for leave to appeal do not meet the threshold
required for leave to appeal
to be granted in terms of the Act.
[6]
The court was not referred to any case law not previously considered
or any new facts from the record. The application falls to
be
dismissed. As far as costs are concerned, even though Gore’s
counsel have disclosed to the court that they have acted
pro
amico
for him throughout these proceedings, this is no bar to him being
awarded costs. Since both sides relied on two counsel, costs
of both
are appropriate.
ORDER:-
[43]
In the result the following order is made:
a. The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs including the
costs of two counsel.
N.
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree
pp
A.
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree
pp
J. ALLEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
8 October 2024
Judgment
delivered
22 October 2024
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives via email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 22 October 2024.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv G. Hulley SC with Adv N. Mayet
Attorneys
for Applicant: Van
Velden-Duffy Inc
Counsel
for Respondent: Adv R. Pearce SC with Adv S.
Sindikolo
Attorneys
for Respondent: Richard Spoor Inc
[1]
Competition
Commission v Pickfords Removals SA (Pty) Ltd
2021
(3) SA 1 (CC) at paragraph 47.
[2]
This letter was dated 11 January 2015. It is not in the record,
however we know about it because of a letter in the record from
RMA,
which confirms the date, and the content of the letter from Gore’s
attorney.
[3]
.There
is no place for formalism in the application of law within the
current constitutional dispensation and more so, where the
interests
of justice dictate otherwise. In
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
2016
(6) SA 279
(CC), par 18, the Constitutional Court
emphasized
that “
The
kind of justice that our constitutional dispensation holds out to
all our people is substantive justice... We cannot emphasise
enough,
that form should never be allowed to triumph over substance
.”
[4]
At
this time the erstwhile employer had been sold to Goldfields which
had written the letter.
[5]
See
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Limited and Another
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC), paragraphs 47 to 55.
[6]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has on more than one occasion reiterated
that an applicant for leave to appeal ‘must convince
the court
on proper grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic
chance of success on appeal. A mere possibility
of success, an
arguable case or one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must
be a sound, rational basis to conclude that
there is a reasonable
prospect of success on appeal’. See
MEC
Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
(1221/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016), paras 16 & 17 (
with
reference to
S
v Smith
2012
(1) SACR 567
(SCA), para 7);
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Rattan
2019
(3) SA 451
SCA, par 34;
Kruger
v S
2014
(1) SACR 647
(SCA) paras 2 & 3.
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