Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1246South Africa
Singh obo Tlapu v Road Accident Fund (26025/20) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1246 (3 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 December 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Singh obo Tlapu v Road Accident Fund (26025/20) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1246 (3 December 2024)
Singh obo Tlapu v Road Accident Fund (26025/20) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1246 (3 December 2024)
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sino date 3 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
26025
/20
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
IRANA
SINGH N.O.
obo
TLAPU: STOFFEL
PLAINTIFF
AND
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
THIS
JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY/ELECTRONICALLY AND SHALL BE
CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY WAY OF E- MAIL/ UPLOADING
ON CASELINES
AND/OR COURT ONLINE. ITS DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE
DECEMBER 3, 2024
NTANGA AJ:
Introduction
[1]
Plaintiff instituted an action against the
Road Accident Fund (“the Defendant”) for damages suffered
as a result of
injuries he sustained in a motor vehicle accident
which occurred on August 2, 2019, along Hebron Road near Soshanguvhe,
Pretoria.
At the time of the accident, Plaintiff was a passenger in a
motor vehicle bearing registration number 0[…] which collided
with motor vehicle bearing registration number H[…].
[2]
During the trial, no evidence was adduced
regarding merits as Plaintiff and Defendant advised the court that
parties have reached
a settlement regarding Past and Future Loss of
Income as well as General Damages in respect of plaintiff’s
claim. A draft
order which incorporates the parties’ agreement
was presented to the court. The court is satisfied with the terms of
the
draft order regarding the Plaintiff’s claim for Past and
Future Loss of Income as well as General Damages.
Issues in dispute
[3]
The court was called upon to determine the
issue of costs. The essence of the dispute between the parties is the
scale on which
costs should be awarded.
[4]
Plaintiff seeks costs against Defendant on
an attorney and own client scale. The costs requested are in respect
of November 13,
2024, November 14, 2024, November 15, 2024, November
18, 2024, and November 19, 2024.
[5]
Defendant tendered costs on a
party-to-party scale in respect of November 13, 2024, November 14,
2024, and November 15, 2024. No
costs were tendered for November 18,
2024, and November 19, 2024.
Submissions
[6]
Plaintiff’s Counsel provided a brief
background as a basis for the claim of costs on an attorney and own
client scale. He
argued that the costs should be for five days. He
submitted that the matter was allocated for hearing on November 13,
2024. He
attended Court on the day and was advised that the matter
would not proceed as Defendant’s legal representative was
booked
off sick.
[7]
After making enquiries at the Defendant’s
offices a claims handler replied in an email expressing surprise that
the matter
was set down for hearing on that day. In the email the
claims handler indicated that she had just realized that the matter
was
set down for hearing on the date of trial.
[8]
The matter was allocated the following day
on November 14, 2024 before a different judge. Again, there was no
appearance on behalf
of the Defendant as its legal representative was
still booked off sick.
[9]
On November 15, 2024 the matter was
allocated for hearing before a third Judge. On the day there was no
appearance on behalf of
Defendant. He then looked for the Defendant’s
legal representative and found him running a full three-day trial for
a different
matter. He argued that this justifies punitive costs. The
matter was then returned for further allocation.
[10]
Ms Ameersingh made herself available to
take over the matter on November 15, 2024. The Defendant made an
offer for Past and Future
Loss of Income of November 15, 2024. There
was no offer or rejection of general damages on November 15, 2024.
Plaintiff’s
Counsel argued that Defendant’s failure to
reject or admit General Damages kept the matter alive. According to
him, Plaintiff
was justified to attend Court to prove his case for
General Damages. Defendant seeks costs on an attorney and own client
scale
as a punitive costs order against Defendant.
[11]
The basis of Plaintiff’s argument was
that the legal representatives who represent the Defendant are
employees of the Defendant,
and their salaries are paid by the
Defendant. He argued that the Defendant should take responsibility
for its employees’
failure to appear in Court on trial day.
Hence his argument for punitive costs against Defendant.
[12]
On November 18, 2024 there was no
allocation for the matter and there were no appearances by either of
the parties.
[13]
The matter was then allocated for hearing
before me on November 19, 2024.
[14]
Defendant
submitted that the claim was lodged in 2020 and in 2021 there was a
widespread COVID-19 pandemic. This affected the speed
that the
Defendant could process the claim. The Road Accident Fund Act
[1]
requires that supplementary documents must be submitted to enable
Defendant to make an assessment of the claim that has been lodged.
[15]
Defendant
called Mr Ngomane as a witness who was initially appointed as its
legal presentative. Mr Ngomane confirmed that he was
allocated the
matter as Defendant’s legal representative. Unfortunately, he
fell sick on November 13, 2024. When Plaintiff’s
attorney
contacted him to enquire about his whereabouts, he indicated that he
was at a medical facility. He sent an email to alert
the Judge that
he was unable to attend Court as he was at a medical facility.
[2]
He also communicated with Plaintiff’s Counsel about his
situation.
[16]
He testified that he was made aware of the
allocation of the matter to another Judge on November 15, 2024. At
that stage there was
only one outstanding issue and that being the
General Damages. He then sent a message indicating that he was in
another Court.
He received a message from Plaintiff’s attorney
enquiring about General Damages. He requested a ballpark figure and
Plaintiff’s
attorney indicated R2 Million. In his reply he
asked if the Loss of Earnings was accepted, what was the reason for
proceeding with
the matter as there was no acceptance or rejection of
General Damages. In his view the Court had no jurisdiction to
determine General
Damages.
[17]
Under cross-examination he testified that
the standard procedure is that they get allocated matters a week
before the hearing date.
They do not deal with claims handlers,
instead, there is a person who liaises with Court officials to obtain
a court roll, thereafter,
matters are allocated to State Attorneys.
This person has an office at the State Attorney’s offices. When
he experienced
health difficulties, he informed the person allocating
the matters to them.
[18]
He was summoned to come to Court on
November 13, 2024, and he advised the Judge that he was heavily
medicated and could not proceed
with the trial. After the offer for
settlement of the matter for Loss of Earnings he was allocated
another matter, hence his appearance
in Court for a different matter
on November 15, 2024.
[19]
Defendant’s
Counsel argued that the matter stood down to Monday at the instance
of Plaintiff’s Counsel. She attended
at the offices of the
Deputy Judge President on November 18, 2024 and was advised that the
matter was not allocated to a Judge.
She argued that according to
Road Accident Fund v Duma
[3]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal stated that the Court does not have
jurisdiction until the Fund has either accepted or rejected General
Damages. If the Fund has accepted or rejected General Damages, the
issue must be submitted to Health Professions Council of South
Africa
(“HPCSA”).
[20]
Defendant’s Counsel further argued
that notwithstanding her submission that the court has no
jurisdiction to determine General
Damages, Plaintiff is not without
remedy. Plaintiff can exhaust remedies available in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act No. 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
[21]
What the Supreme Court of Appeal said in
Road Accident Fund v Duma is the following:
“…
[19] … In
accordance with the model that the legislature chose to adopt, the
decision whether or not the injury of a third
party is serious enough
to meet the threshold requirement for an award of general damages was
conferred on the Fund and not the
court. That much appears from the
stipulation in regulation 3(3)(c) that the Fund shall only be obliged
to pay general damages
if the Fund – and not the court –
is satisfied that the injury has correctly been assessed in
accordance with the RAF
4 form as serious. Unless the Fund is so
satisfied the plaintiff simply has no claim for general damages. This
means that unless
the plaintiff can establish the jurisdictional fact
that the Fund is so satisfied, the court has no jurisdiction to
entertain the
claim for general damages against the Fund. Stated
somewhat differently, in order for the court to consider a claim for
general
damages, the third party must satisfy the Fund, not the
court, that his or her injury was serious. Appreciation of this basic
principle,
I think, leads one to the following conclusions:
(a)
Since the Fund is an organ of State
as defined in s 239 of the Constitution and is performing a public
function in terms of legislation,
its decision in terms of
regulations 3(3)(c)(d), whether or not the RAF 4 form correctly
assessed the claimant’s injury as
‘serious’,
constitutes ‘administrative action’ as contemplated by
the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). (A
‘decision’ is defined in PAJA to include the making of a
determination.) The position is therefore
governed by the provisions
of PAJA.
(b)
If the Fund should fail to make a
decision within reasonable time, the plaintiff’s remedy is
under PAJA.
(c)
If the Fund should take a decision
against the plaintiff, that decision cannot be ignored simply because
it was not taken within
a reasonable time or because no legal or
medical basis is provided for the decision or because the court does
not agree with the
reasons given.
(d)
A decision by the Fund is subject to
an internal administrative appeal to an appeal tribunal.
(e)
Neither the decision of the Fund nor
the decision of the appeal tribunal is subject to an appeal to the
court. The court’s
control over these decisions is by means of
the review proceedings under PAJA.
…
[20]
To recapitulate; if the Fund rejects the RAF 4 form – with or
without proper reasons – it means that the requirement
that the
Fund must be satisfied that the injury is serious has not been met.
The court simply has no jurisdiction to entertain
the claim. The
plaintiff’s remedy is to take the rejection on appeal in terms
of regulation 3(4). It follows that the rejection
cannot be ignored
merely because it was not raised within a reasonable time. This does
not mean, as was suggested, for instance
in Louw v Road Accident
Fund… that the Fund can avoid and frustrate every claim
against it indefinitely by simply not taking
a decision either way.
The solution is to be found in s 6(2)(g) read with s 6(3) of PAJA.
These sections provide that if an administrative
authority
unreasonably delays to take a decision in circumstances where there
is no period prescribed for that decision, an application
can be
brought for judicial review of the failure to take the decision
”
.
[4]
[22]
To
further substantiate her argument Defendant’s Counsel relied on
the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment of Road Accident Fund
v Faria
[5]
which followed the RAF V Duma
[6]
decision on the procedure and the law that obtains regarding General
Damages claims. She argued that the case ended on November
15, 2024
when the offer for Loss of Income was made and accepted. The matter
should have been removed from the trial court roll.
[23]
Upon reading the papers that were filed, I
noted that an email from Defendant’s Counsel indicates an offer
for settlement
of Loss of Earnings and concludes by stating that
“
GENERAL DAMAGES to follow
”.
[24]
On
acceptance of this offer by the Plaintiff what then remained to be
resolved was the issue of General Damages. Plaintiff’s
Counsel
argued that the RAF V Duma
[7]
decision does not say that the Court does not have jurisdiction to
determine General Damages. He argued that Plaintiff was entitled
to
refer the matter to Court for resolution of General Damages. I do not
agree with this submission. As indicated above, the Supreme
Court of
Appeal has clearly settled this area of the law.
[25]
Applying the decision of the RAF v Duma,
this Court would have no jurisdiction to determine General Damages.
Once the issue of Past
and Future Loss of Income was settled, what
remained was for the parties to refer the settlement agreement to be
made an order
of the Court. Regarding General Damages, the matter
ought not to have been referred to trial Court as the Court would not
have
jurisdiction to determine General Damages. Plaintiff had at his
disposal the remedies set out in the RAF v Duma decision, including
PAJA remedies as well as referral to HPCSA.
[26]
This Court’s finding is that once the
matter was settled on Loss of Past and Future Income, it was not
competent for Plaintiff
to still refer the matter to trial court for
determination of General Damages.
[27]
On
the issue of costs on an attorney and own client scale, there are
various factors which guide the court on whether such a punitive
costs order is justified. The unreasonable manner in which a litigant
conduct itself is one of the factors to be considered.
[8]
In Boost Sports v SA Breweries the Supreme Court of Appeal stated the
following:
“…
[27] In the language
of Lombard (at 877), when a company has everything to gain and
nothing to lose, it would be putting a premium
upon vexatious and
speculative actions if such practice (namely compelling security)
were not adopted. In re Alluvial Creek Ltd
1929 CPD 532
at 535
Gardiner J said in the context of punitive costs order:
‘
Now
sometimes such an order is given because of something in the conduct
of a party which the Court considers should be punished,
malice,
misleading the Court and things like that, but I think the order may
also be granted without any reflection upon the party
where the
proceedings are vexatious, and by vexatious I mean where they have
the effect of being vexatious, although the intent
may not have been
that they should be vexatious. There are people who enter into
litigation with the most upright purpose and a
most firm belief in
the justice of their cause, and yet whose proceedings may be regarded
as vexatious when they put the other
side to unnecessary trouble and
expense which the other side ought not to bear
’
.
[9]
[28]
Regarding
the grounds upon which the punitive costs order on an attorney and
own client scale may be awarded the court in Machett
v Pretorious and
Others
[10]
stated that:
“…
[8]
Costs
on an attorney and client scale is not to be awarded lightly and
should be considered in the light that a person who exercised
a right
to obtain a judicial decision not be penalized for doing so. The
grounds upon which such an order may be granted is where
a party has
been guilty of dishonesty or fraud or was vexatious or malicious or
for frivolous motives brought the said application
or action
”.
[11]
[29]
In
Public Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[12]
the Constitutional Court stated the following:
“…
Costs
on an attorney and client scale are to be awarded where there is
fraudulent, dishonest, vexatious conduct and conduct that
amounts to
an abuse of court process. As correctly stated by the Labour Appeal
Court-
‘
(t)he
scale of attorney and client is an extraordinary one which should be
reserved for cases where it can be found that a litigant
conducted
itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible
[manner]. Such an award is exceptional and is intended
to be very
punitive and indicative of extreme opprobrium
’.
…”
.
[30]
In
Mkhatshwa and Others v Mkhatshwa
[13]
the Constitutional Court stated that:
“
Generally
speaking, punitive costs are not frequently made, and exceptional
circumstances must exist before they are warranted
”.
[14]
[31]
Before concluding this issue, it is
important to summarize the basis upon which Plaintiff claims for
punitive costs on an attorney
and own client scale. Plaintiff’s
argument is based on non-appearance by Defendant’s Counsel on
the dates that the
matter was scheduled for hearing. Plaintiff argues
that Defendant should have found a substitute legal representative
upon being
made aware of unavailability of the allocated legal
representative. He argued that the Defendant is the employer of the
legal representatives
not the State Attorney. This argument was not
sustained by any evidence. On the contrary, Mr Ngomane testified that
they are allocated
matters by someone employed by the State Attorney.
[32]
As indicated above, the matter was settled
between the parties on November 15, 2024 in respect of Loss of Past
and Future Income.
Defendant tendered costs on a party-to-party
scale. Later, and before the matter appeared before me, parties had
also settled on
General Damages.
[33]
There is no tender for costs for November
18, 2024, and November 19, 2024. It is common cause that the matter
was not allocated
for hearing on November 18, 2024.
[34]
When the matter appeared before me on
November 19, 2024, parties had settled on Loss of Past and Future
Loss of Income and General
Damages. What remained was to make the
draft order arising from the settlement agreement an order of court
and a determination
on whether Plaintiff is entitled to costs on an
attorney and client scale.
[35]
It
is trite that the award of costs is within the court’s
discretion. This discretion is exercised judiciously upon
consideration
of all relevant factors. The purpose of the cost award
is to mitigate against successful litigants being out of pocket
because
of litigation process that they should not have been involved
in but for the opponent’s conduct in such litigation.
[15]
Punitive costs are awarded to alleviate the successful litigant’s
financial hardship endured because of the litigation. Exceptional
circumstances must exist before punitive costs are awarded.
[16]
[36]
I am not persuaded that Defendant conducted
itself in an unreasonable manner that justifies a punitive costs
order. Defendant took
steps to appoint a legal representative who
fell sick on the date of hearing. This is clearly beyond control of
the Defendant;
I do not believe that Defendant should be mulcted with
punitive costs arising from non-appearance occasioned by the ill
health
of its legal representative. Also, the matter was not
allocated for hearing on November 18, 2024, there is therefore no
party entitled
to costs for November 18, 2024.
[37]
What then remains is appearance before me
on November 19, 2024. I have already stated that this matter was not
legally competent
for hearing at trial court on November 19, 2024 as
the trial court has no jurisdiction to determine General Damages. At
the very
least, parties could appear in the settlement court to seek
an order making the settlement agreement an order of the court. This
is because when parties appeared before me the matter was already
settled for Loss of Past and Future Income and General Damages.
I see
no reason for a punitive cost order in this regard.
[38]
In the result I make the following order:
1.
In respect of
Plaintiff’s claim for Past and
Future Loss of Income and General Damages
an order is made in terms of the amended draft order marked “X”.
2.
The Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff’s
party and party legal costs on the applicable
High
Court
scale to date hereof, including
the costs of Plaintiff’s counsel for November 13, 2024,
November 14, 2024, November 15, 2024
on a Party and Party Scale C,
and the preparation and qualifying fees of the Plaintiff’s
experts, if any. The said costs
shall be payable within 14 days of
the date of taxation or agreed settlement of the party and party Bill
of Costs, whereafter interest
shall be payable at the rate of 7,75%
p.a.
3.
The Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff’s
party and party legal costs, including the costs of Plaintiff’s
counsel for
November 19, 2024 on a Party and Party costs on the High
Court scale. The said costs shall be payable within 14 days of the
date
of taxation or agreed settlement of the party and party Bill of
Costs, whereafter interest shall be payable at the rate of 7,75%
p.a.
M NTANGA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG LOCAL
DIVISION
Date of Hearing: 19
November 2024
Date of Judgement: 3
December 2024
Appearances:
Plaintiff’s
Counsel: Adv Khan
Instructed by: RA Seedat
Attorneys
Defendant’s
Counsel: Ms Ameersingh
Instructed
by: State Attorney - Johannesburg
[1]
Road
Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
.
[2]
See
Caselines on 076-1
[3]
Road
Accident Fund v Duma
2013 (6) SA 9
SCA
[4]
See
note 3 supra.
[5]
RAF
v Faria 2014 (6) SA 19 (SCA).
[6]
See
note 3 supra.
[7]
See
note 3 supra.
[8]
See
Boost Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 38
(SCA) .
[9]
See
note 8 supra.
[10]
Matchett
v Pretorious and Others (3119/2022) [2022] ZAKZPHC 60 (12 October
2022).
[11]
See
note 10 supra.
[12]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
CC.
[13]
Mkhatshwa
and Others v Mkhatshwa and Others [2021] (10) BCLR 1191 (CC).
[14]
See
note 13 supra.
[15]
Vehicle
Delivery Services a division of Onelogix (Pty) Ltd v Key Group and
Another (4655/2021)
[2023] ZAFSHC 141
(11 May 2023).
[16]
See
note 14 supra.
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