Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 357South Africa
Ntoro v Road Accident Fund (37913/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 357 (21 April 2023)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 357
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Ntoro v Road Accident Fund (37913/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 357 (21 April 2023)
Ntoro v Road Accident Fund (37913/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 357 (21 April 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_357.html
sino date 21 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER
:
37913/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In the matter between:
NTORO
DISEBO BETTY
Plaintiff
and
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
Neutral
Citation:
Ntoro Disebo Betty v Road
Accident Fund
(Case No: 37913/2018)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 357 (21 April 2023)
JUDGMENT
OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL CSP AJ:
Introduction
[1]
Ms Disebo Betty Ntoro (“the
Plaintiff”) instituted action against the Road Accident Fund
(“RAF”) in which
she claims damages as a result of the
injuries she sustained in an alleged pedestrian motor vehicle
collision.
[2]
The issues of quantum and liability were
separated in terms of Uniform Rule 33(4) and the plaintiff proceeded
on the issue of liability
only.
[3]
The defendant, the RAF, denied liability,
contending that the plaintiff sustained injuries during an assault
and that she was not
injured due to a pedestrian motor vehicle
collision.
[4]
The relevant portions of the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim aver that she was involved in a motor vehicle
collision at approximately
23h00 on 2 July 2015. The plaintiff
was a pedestrian walking along Vryburg Road, Mafikeng when she was
knocked from behind
by an unidentified motor vehicle.
[5]
The driver of the unidentified motor
vehicle caused the accident by driving at a high speed and failed to
apply breaks timeously
in order to avoid the collision. The
plaintiff further avers that the unidentified driver failed to give
any or adequate
warning of his approach at the time when he could and
should have done so.
[6]
As a result of the accident, the plaintiff
sustained various injuries and was forced to undergo medical and
hospital treatment at
the Mafikeng Provincial Hospital.
The plaintiff’s case
[7]
The plaintiff was the
only witness to lead evidence in support of her case. She
testified that on the night of the incident
she escorted her sister,
Tsipiso Ntoro, and her child to the Bophelong Provincial Hospital,
Mafikeng. At about 23h00 she
left the hospital alone and was on
her way to her home in Seweding Village. After being dropped
off in town, she proceeded
on foot and as she was walking on the left
side of the road, approaching Home Affairs, a motor vehicle
approached her from behind
and hit her on her right arm with its side
mirror. She then fell on her face to the ground. After
hitting the tar road
surface, she lifted her head and noticed that
the vehicle driving away was a bakkie, similar to a Mitsubishi. She
then lost
consciousness.
[8]
The plaintiff stated
that she regained consciousness at the Clinic and was told by the
nurses that members of the South African
Police Services(“SAPS”)
transported her to the Clinic. The nurses further informed her
that they were informed
by the police officers that she was
assaulted. The plaintiff testified that at that stage she was
in pain and unable to respond
to the nurses. However, she was
shaking her head because she wanted to tell them that she was not
assaulted but hit by a
motor vehicle.
[9]
Due to her injuries,
she was transported by ambulance to Bophelong Provincial Hospital.
While she was examined by the doctor
at the hospital, she was handed
a piece of paper and pen, on which she wrote that she was not
assaulted, but involved in a motor
vehicle accident. The piece
of paper was handed to the doctor. She was discharged from
hospital on the same day at
about 12h00.
[10]
On 7 July 2015 she
experienced pain and was again transported to hospital. At the
dental department x-rays were taken.
[11]
The plaintiff
testified that due to the accident she sustained head and facial
injuries, amongst others, a fracture and dislocated
yaw, her gums
were bleeding and teeth were broken. She was also bleeding from
the ears.
[12]
She reported the
accident to the Mafikeng Police about 13/14 days later. The
police officer accompanied her to the accident
scene, where she
pointed out where she was walking next to the road at the time of the
accident. An accident report (“AR”)
was compiled
and during November 2015 she deposed to a sworn statement to the
Police.
[13]
She testified that as the motor vehicle
approached her from behind, she was walking and signalling to the
driver to give her a lift.
According to her the motor vehicle
was not travelling at a high speed.
[14]
During cross examination by the defendant
the plaintiff testified that prior to her being hit by the motor
vehicle she was walking
at a slow pace. She further stated that
she was aware of the motor vehicle approaching because the lights of
the motor vehicle
were switched on.
[15]
She further testified that shortly before
the motor vehicle hit her, the vehicle slowed down. The
plaintiff stated that she
was hit by the motor vehicle’s left
side mirror on the upper right arm, after which she fell on her left
knee and hands hitting
the road surface. She indicated that she
tried to break the fall by balancing on her hands, but she was unable
to and as
a result she hit her head and face against the tar road.
[16]
The plaintiff conceded to the fact that the
incident transpired during July, in winter and the area was dark.
She stated that
she was able to identify the motor vehicle as it was
driving away because the lights from the Department of Home Affairs
illuminated
the area.
[17]
During
cross examination the plaintiff was confronted with her contradicting
versions contained in the AR, her sworn statement to
SAPS and her
section 19(f) statement.
[1]
She explained that the police officer who took down her sworn
statement was unable to hear her clearly, as she was in pain
and her
jaw was fractured. She also stated that the person who assisted
her at her attorney’s office was impatient
and he told her she
was not smelling good. During the consultation with this
person, she was crying and bleeding from her
mouth.
[18]
The plaintiff further testified during
cross examination that the AR was compiled on 14 July 2015 and that
she attended to her attorney’s
office on 17 July 2015.
She further stated that she made a sworn statement at the Mafikeng
Police during November 2017.
[19]
She also confirmed that on 29 June 2022,
her attorneys appointed a private investigator to investigate the
accident and furthermore
that she was present when the accident scene
was photographed by the private investigator. The plaintiff
testified that the
private investigator did not understand her during
their consultation and that could have been the reason why her
statement to
the investigator contradicted her oral evidence.
The defendant’s case
[20]
No evidence was presented in the
defendant’s case.
Submissions by the plaintiff and
defendant
[21]
Written submissions were provided by both
parties to the court on 16 and 17 March 2023 respectively.
[22]
Counsel for the plaintiff argued that the
plaintiff’s evidence should be accepted in that her injuries
were a result of a
pedestrian motor vehicle collision as detailed in
her section 19(f) statement. She further contended that the
attending doctor
at Bophelong Provincial Hospital mistakenly recorded
that the injuries were caused as a result of an assault.
[23]
Therefore, she contended that the court
should find in favour of the plaintiff and the defendant is liable
for the plaintiff damages.
[24]
The defendant argued that the plaintiff’s
evidence was riddled with inconsistencies and contradictions when
compared with
her previous statements. Furthermore, the
defendant asserts that the plaintiff’s explanations for the
contradictions
were not plausible. Therefore, the defendant
argued that the only inference that could be drawn from her
contradictory evidence
was that the plaintiff was fabricating
evidence and she was not injured during a pedestrian motor vehicle
accident. Counsel
submitted that the plaintiff’s claim
should be dismissed.
Issues
[25]
What stands for decision from the evidence
before me is whether or not there was a pedestrian motor vehicle
collision and whether
the unknown driver of the unidentified vehicle
drove negligently and that such negligent driving caused the
collision. If
he/she did, the plaintiff must succeed with her
claim. On the contrary, if he/she did not, the plaintiff must
fail.
The Law
[26]
The question before
me in the present matter is whether the plaintiff proved her case on
a balance of probabilities in that she
was injured during a
pedestrian motor vehicle accident.
[27]
In
National
Employees General Insurance v Ja
g
ers
,
[2]
Eksteen AJP (as he was known then) had this to say about onus of
proof:
“
It
seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal
case, the onus can ordinarily be discharged by adducing
credible
evidence to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests.
In a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy
as it is in a
criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff
…”
[28]
The following
remarks were made:
“
I
would merely stress however that when in circumstances one talks
about a plaintiff having discharged the onus which rested upon
him on
a balance of probabilities one really means that the Court is
satisfied on a balance of probabilities that he was telling
the truth
and that his version was therefore acceptable. It does not seem
to me to be desirable for a Court first to consider
the question of
the credibility of the witnesses as the trial Judge in the present
case, and then, having concluded that enquiry,
to consider the
probabilities of the case, as though the two aspects constitute
separable fields of enquiry. In fact, as
I have pointed out it
is only where a consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate
where the truth probably lies, that
recourse is had to an estimate of
relative credibility apart from the probabilities.”
[3]
[29]
In
JM
Grove v The Road Accident Fund
[4]
the
Court held as follows:
“
The
RAF is obliged to compensate for damages arising from bodily injury
‘caused by or arising from ‘driving of a motor
vehicle.
The causal link that is required is essentially the same as the
causal link that is required for Aquiline liability.
There can
be no question of liability if it is not proved that the wrongdoer
caused the damage of the person suffering the
harm. Whether the act
can be identified as a cause, depends on a conclusion drawn from the
available facts and the relevant probabilities.
The important
question is how one should determine the causal nexus namely whether
one fact follows from another.”
[30]
The
basic rule is that the person, in this case the plaintiff, who
asserts must prove.
[5]
The defendant can deny the allegations or make positive allegations
aimed at refuting the plaintiff’s evidence.
[31]
Therefore,
the plaintiff during a trial must present the court with evidence, be
it through witnesses, documents or other means
accepted in law.
Once the plaintiff presents evidence to the court, it is up to the
defendant to respond to the evidence
presented.
[32]
Furthermore,
I am alive to the fact that the plaintiff is a single witness.
I have to be satisfied that the evidence of the
single witness is
reliable and trustworthy.
[33]
Therefore,
the court will weigh up and test the plaintiff’s allegation
against the general probabilities to determine whether
the evidence
is true or not. If the probabilities favour the plaintiff, then
the court will accept her version as being probably
true.
Evaluation
[34]
In the present matter the plaintiff did not
make a good impression on the court and I was left with the distinct
impression that
she was attempting to adjust her evidence,
particularly during cross examination by the defendant. The
plaintiff was questioned
regarding various inconsistent statements
made after the incident and such raise concerns.
[35]
In view of the above, amongst others, I
have to consider the averments made in the documentation lodged by
the plaintiff with the
RAF in support of her claim.
[36]
Firstly, an AR was compiled on 2 July 2015
and the following was stated in the said report;
“
The
pedestrian, a victim in this case alleges that she was hiking for a
lift when unknown motor vehicle hit her and run away.
She had
serious injuries with fractures on the upper and lower jaw, bruises
on the left eye and nose, scratches on the stomach.”
[37]
Secondly, in terms of the section 19(f)
statement dated 17 July 2015, the plaintiff stated the following;
“
On or about
02 July 2015 at about 23h00 I was involved in a pedestrian-motor
vehicle accident. I was hiking for a lift at
Vryburg road,
Mafikeng next to home affairs.
(sic)
An unknown motor vehicle travelling at high speed
hit me and thereafter failed to stop and ran.”
[38]
Thirdly, on 12 November 2015, the plaintiff
made a sworn statement to the SAPS regarding the incident and stated
as follows;
“
On Thursday
2015-07-03 at about 00:30 I was from Provincial hospital walking at
Home Affairs department road building. When
I approached the
tar road the unknown vehicle came in front of me and I was on the
left side of the road it came and hit me and
threw on the ground and
never stop and runaway. I did not noticed/identified anyone of
them because it night, I felt on the
ground and faint I do not who
call the police to rescued me because I was waken by the police who
took me to the clinic with the
sense that I was assaulted by unknown
people. And they also give a reported to the clinic that they
suspect that I was assaulted.
The sister at the clinic also
called the ambulance and referred me to provincial hospital also give
them reported that I was assaulted
not hit by the unknown vehicle
accident. I gave the fully reported to the doctor after I
noticed from the file that the write
assault not accident. I
explained the story to the doctor 07/07/2015 what had happened.”
(sic)
[39]
The following contradictions and
inconsistencies were noted during the plaintiff’s evidence in
court;
39.1.
The plaintiff testified that she was
walking next to the road when the unknown motor vehicle approached
her from behind, as the
motor vehicle turned in front of her to stop,
it knocked her down. However, in the statement made to SAPS on
12 November
2015, nearly four months after the incident, she stated
that the motor vehicle came from the front and not from behind. She
furthermore did not indicate that prior to being hit by the motor
vehicle she was hitchhiking and that the motor vehicle slowed
down to
stop in front of her.
39.2.
The plaintiff contradicted her statement
made to the private investigator on 29 June 2022 on how the collision
occurred. In
this statement, she stated that as she arrived at
the crossing at the Mafikeng Department of Home Affairs, she stopped
walking
and while standing on the side of the road she lifted her
hand hitching a ride. The motor vehicle approached her, slowed
down, and without any reason the motor vehicle increased speed.
As a result, she was hit on her right hand, after which she
fell to
the ground and lost consciousness. In contradiction to that she
testified in court that when the collision occurred,
she was walking
in the direction of her residence. What’s more, she never
mentioned to the private investigator that
she was able to identify
the motor vehicle as a white bakkie similar to a Mitsubishi.
39.3.
During her evidence in court, she stated
that after she was hit by the motor vehicle she fell to the ground
and as she lifted her
head, she noticed the motor vehicle that
collided with her was a white bakkie similar to a Mitsubishi.
The plaintiff only
provided a description of the motor vehicle during
her evidence in court. She never mentioned this fact in the AR,
the section
19(f) statement, her statement made to the investigator
appointed by her legal representatives or in her sworn statement to
the
SAPS.
39.4.
In
the Particulars of Claim
[6]
the plaintiff avers that the accident was caused solely by the
negligent driving of the insured driver of the motor vehicle who
was
negligent because h/she drove at an excessive speed in the
circumstances. This allegation was also made in the AR dated
2
July 2015, however during her testimony in court, the plaintiff
stated that the motor vehicle was travelling at normal speed.
39.5.
The plaintiff also testified that after
identifying the motor vehicle, she fainted and was unconscious, she
only regained consciousness
at the Clinic. She stated that the
averment in her sworn statement that the police officers woke her at
the accident scene
was incorrect and the officer who took down her
statement did not understand her and he was impatient during the
interview.
39.6.
Furthermore, the plaintiff testified that
when she regained consciousness at the Clinic the police officers who
transported her
were not present. She disputed the fact that
she told the private investigator that when she regained
consciousness at the
Clinic, the police officers and nurses were
present.
[40]
The plaintiff, when confronted with the
above-mentioned contradictions, testified that;
40.1.
The police officers who completed the AR
did not understand her.
40.2.
The person who took down her statement at
the office of her attorney was impatient and she was also crying
during the interview.
40.3.
The police officer who took down her
statement at the SAPS during November 2015 was unable to hear what
she was saying because her
jaw and teeth were wired, as a result she
had difficulty in communicating clearly. Furthermore, the
police officer also said
her breath was smelly. However, it is
evident from the hospital records that the implants in her jaw were
removed on 3 September
2015 before her deposed to the sworn
statement.
40.4.
The collision occurred in 2015, seven years
ago, and therefore she was unable to recall exact details of what
transpired on the
night of the collision.
[41]
I am of the view, that the explanations
provided by the plaintiff regarding the contradictions as noted above
are not plausible.
[42]
Undoubtedly, the oral testimony of the
plaintiff in relation to how and where the alleged collision occurred
appeared to be contradictory
and improbable. The contradictions
were pointed out earlier in the judgment. It is peculiar that
the plaintiff never
mentioned the description of the motor vehicle in
any of her statements after the collision. The only inference
in this regard
is that the plaintiff did not see the motor vehicle or
that she was uncertain as to what happened on the night she was
injured.
Furthermore, I find it improbable in the circumstances
that she would have been able to identify the motor vehicle.
[43]
Furthermore, the plaintiff was not a
credible and reliable witness because she failed to provide the court
with a coherent version
as to what transpired on the night of the
collision.
[44]
I am of the view, that the reason why the
plaintiff contradicted her evidence during cross examination, was
because she fabricated
evidence regarding the identification of the
motor vehicle involved.
[45]
Most disquieting was that she testified
that the motor vehicle collided with her right arm. It is
extraordinary that there was no
sign of her right arm having been
involved in some kind of blunt trauma. One would have expected
that if her right arm came
into contact with a fast-moving object
such as a motor vehicle that there would have been visible injuries
such as abrasions or
even a fracture. Contrary to any injuries
to the plaintiff’s right arm, she only sustained facial
injuries.
[46]
Furthermore, the plaintiff testified that
after the vehicle struck her right arm, she attempted to break the
fall, stretching out
her hands and she landed on her left knee
whereafter she plummeted face down on the road. Strangely, she
sustained only facial
injuries. Considering that she landed on
her left knee and only then fell forward, I find it highly unlikely
that she would
have sustained a dislocated and broken jaw and teeth.
She presented with no injuries to her left knee or her hands.
[47]
How the plaintiff sustained the
facial injuries remains unclear. It is not the duty of the
court to investigate what their
cause is, but suffice to state, that
her injuries are not consistent with her description of the
collision.
[48]
It is important to note that the police
officers who transported the plaintiff to the Clinic reported to the
nurses that the plaintiff
was assaulted, the same information was
provided to the doctor treating the plaintiff at the Bophelong
Provincial Hospital.
The plaintiff testified that she was
handed a pen and paper by the doctor treating her and she noted on
the paper that she was
involved in a motor vehicle collision.
The doctor was not called to testify, furthermore the note she made
was not produced
in the matter and therefore no independent
corroborating evidence was presented by the plaintiff as to how she
was injured.
Conclusion
[49]
On a conspectus of
the totality of the evidence and taking into account the concerns
raised in relation to the plaintiff’s
evidence in this matter,
I am not satisfied that the plaintiff has discharged the onus of
establishing her case in respect of liability.
[50]
I again emphasise
that the burden of proving that a pedestrian motor vehicle collision
happened as a result of the negligent driving
of another in
consequence of which the plaintiff sustained injuries, remains the
duty of the plaintiff.
[51]
Against
this background, I find that the plaintiff in the present case has
failed to discharge the onus that rested on her of proving
that the
defendant is liable to compensate her for her damages. I am
therefore not persuaded that the injuries sustained
by the plaintiff
arose from a pedestrian motor vehicle accident.
[52]
In the premises, I
make the following order:
1. The
plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs
CSP OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email, by being uploaded to
Case Lines
and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
16h00 on 21 April 2023.
DATE OF HEARING: 8 & 9 March
2023
DATE JUDGMENT DELIVERED: 21
April 2023
APPEARANCES
:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Advocate
T Lekwape
Cell
no: 072 771 5751
Email:
tsebalek@gmail.com
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Dike
Attorneys: Ms. A.N. Nyathi
Contact
number: 011 057 7099
Email:
annyathi@dikeattorneys.co.za
Attorney
for the Defendant:
Mr
D Sondlani
State
Attorney, Johannesburg
Cell
no: 066 275 0400
Email:
dokodelas@raf.co.za
[1]
Section
19
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of 1996
provides:
“
The
Fund or an agent shall not be obliged to compensate any person in
terms of
section 17
for any loss or damages-
(a)…, or
(b)…
(c)…
(i)…;
or
(ii)…
(d)…
(i)…;
or
(ii)…;
or
(e)…
(i)…;or
(ii)…;
or
(iii)…
(f)
if the third party refuses or fails-
(i) to submit to the
Fund or such agent, together with his or her claim form as
prescribed or within a reasonable
period thereafter and if
he or she is in a position to do so, an affidavit in which
particulars of the accident that
gave
rise to the claim concerned are fully set out; or
(ii)to furnish the Fund
or such agent with copies of all statements and documents relating
to the accident that gave
rise
to the claim concerned, within a reasonable period after having come
into possession thereof”
[2]
1984
(4) SA 437
(E) at 44D.
[3]
Page
440G-H.
[4]
(
974/10)
[2011] ZASCA 55
(31 March 2011) at para 7.
[5]
Van
Wyk v Lewis
1924
AD 438
at page 444.
[6]
Para
[5.3].
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Ntoko v Road Accident Fund (2024/073741) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1042 (16 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1042High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Ntsapo v Road Accident Fund (31932/2004) [2025] ZAGPJHC 138 (22 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 138High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Ntuli v S (A22/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 916 (13 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 916High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
T.D.N v City Of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2769/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 727 (26 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 727High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Ngalo v Road Accident Fund (2004/1897) [2024] ZAGPJHC 867 (5 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 867High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar