Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 299South Africa
T.B.M v Road Accident Fund (21/50117) [2023] ZAGPJHC 299 (5 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.B.M v Road Accident Fund (21/50117) [2023] ZAGPJHC 299 (5 April 2023)
T.B.M v Road Accident Fund (21/50117) [2023] ZAGPJHC 299 (5 April 2023)
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sino date 5 April 2023
FLYNOTES:
CHILD AND DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY
ACTUARIAL
– Loss of income – Child and head injury –
Experts relying on what told by guardian who was not
called to
give evidence – Hospital records showing no indication of
head injury – Court having been informed
that merits settled
– Critical part of the merits, being the nature of the
damage, had not been conceded – Not
proven that child
suffered a diffuse axonal injury – No indication that
general damages or future medical expenses
justified – Fund
absolved from the instance.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case No. 21/50117
Case No. 21/50117
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 5 April 2023
In the matter between:
TBM
on behalf of NSM, a
child
Plaintiff
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The Plaintiff, TBM, sues in her capacity as the guardian of
the minor child, NSM. She seeks damages for NSM’s injuries
arising
from a motor vehicle collision which took place on 19
February 2018. NSM was a passenger in a car involved in a
multi-vehicle collision
near the Johannesburg Central Business
District. In the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, in which NSM
is erroneously described
as an adult with full legal capacity, it is
alleged that NSM suffered injuries to her head and to her lower left
leg.
2
One consequence of the head injury was said at trial to have
been a mild concussion that had resulted in diffuse axonal injury.
Diffuse axonal injury is a brain injury that can be too subtle to
detect using imaging equipment, but may nonetheless affect a person’s
higher brain functions. In a child, such an injury can stunt
intellectual development. It can have an insidious effect on their
scholastic achievement and, accordingly, on their capacity to acquire
the qualifications necessary to compete on the labour market.
3
Injuries of this nature, in children, are generally
compensated for, where all the other requirements for liability have
been met,
with a lump sum for loss of future earnings. The amount
awarded is representative of the difference between the child’s
earning
capacity before the injury and their capacity after the
injury, less any contingency deductions a court may decide to make.
4
Injuries of this nature can result in very large claims being
made. This case is no exception. In his written submissions, filed
somewhat prematurely before any evidence was led, Mr. Ndou, who
appeared for TBM, sought an award marginally in excess of R10
million, almost three quarters of which was TBM’s claim for
NSM’s loss of future earning capacity. Mr. Ndou also motivated
for an award of R300 000 for future medical expenses and an amount of
R 2.5 million for general damages.
5
There is good reason to believe that these figures have been
inappropriately inflated. There is no indication on the papers that
NSM’s alleged impairment is such that an award for general
damages is justified or that any award at all for future medical
expenses should be made (see
section 17
of the
Road Accident Fund Act
56 of 1996
).
6
Be that as it may, I need not consider the appropriate quantum
of any award to which NSM may be entitled. This is because no
evidence
whatsoever was placed before me that NSM has actually
suffered a head injury. TBM’s case consisted entirely of expert
evidence
that assumed that a head injury had been suffered. But none
of the experts was able to say that this was actually so. They relied
on what they had been told, usually by TBM, who was not called to
give evidence. NSM’s hospital records show no indication
of a
head injury. No-one who treated NSM’s injuries was called to
testify, and no-one was called to say what actually happened
during
the accident.
7
In those circumstances, it has not been proven that NSM has
suffered a diffuse axonal injury as a result of the accident. Nor has
it been proven that what was presented at trial as a post-accident
decline in her scholastic performance was actually the result
of such
an injury.
8
In any event, there is no evidence that there was a decline in
NSM’s scholastic performance after the accident. This is
because
the educational psychologist called to give evidence on MSM’s
behalf compiled her report on the basis that the accident took
place
on 19 February
2019
, a year after it was agreed that the
accident actually took place. Her report was compiled on evidence
that pre- and post-dated
19 February 2019. None of the school reports
to which she had regard pre-dated the actual date of the accident.
Her conclusions
were accordingly meaningless. I enquired whether her
reference to the date of 19 February 2019 in her report might have
been a
typographical error (albeit one that was repeated several
times). The educational psychologist vehemently asserted that she had
the date of the accident right, or at least that she had correctly
recorded the date on which she had been informed the accident
took
place.
9
In these circumstances, nothing has been proved, and an order
absolving the defendant, the RAF, from the instance must follow.
10
This outcome is in no small part due to inadequate preparation
for trial on the part of both parties’ legal representatives.
At the outset of the trial, I was informed by counsel that the
parties had settled what counsel described as “the merits”
of TBM’s claim. But it emerged during the trial that this could
not have been true. The RAF had clearly not conceded the
nature and
extent of NSM’s injury, because the RAF had not accepted that
NSM had suffered a head injury. Mr. Ngomane cross-examined
extensively on the absence of any evidence of a head injury. He
argued at the close of the trial that a head injury had not been
proved.
11
It ought to have occurred to the parties’ legal
representatives that this meant that the “merits” of the
trial
– in the sense of the RAF’s liability to compensate
MSM for her proven losses – could not have been settled. A
separation of issues between liability and quantum of damages is only
possible if the nature of the injuries is conceded, but the
amount to
be awarded to compensate for the consequences of those injuries is
not agreed. Here, a critical part of the “merits”
of the
claim – the nature of the damage suffered – had not been
conceded, and so it could not be said that the “merits”
had been settled.
12
For these reasons, I do not think any costs order is
justified. The trial proceeded on a wholly mistaken shared
assumption. Nor
do I think that the plaintiff’s legal
representatives ought to be permitted recover their fees and
disbursements from the
plaintiff. TBM was entitled to expect a higher
standard of representation than she received.
13
Accordingly –
13.1
The defendant is absolved from the instance, with each party paying
their own costs.
13.2
The plaintiff’s attorneys may not recover from the plaintiff
fees or disbursements relating
to the hearing before Wilson J between
7 and 13 March 2023.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email, by uploading it to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment
to the
South African Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 5 April 2023.
HEARD
ON:
7, 8, 9 and 13 March 2023
DECIDED
ON:
5 April 2023
For
the Plaintiff:
ML Ndou
BH Taula Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
T Ngomane
Instructed
by:
the State Attorney
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