Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 464South Africa
M.M obo L.N.M v MEC for Health, Gauteng (2018/4531) [2023] ZAGPJHC 464 (15 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 May 2023
Headnotes
in an action for damages alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## M.M obo L.N.M v MEC for Health, Gauteng (2018/4531) [2023] ZAGPJHC 464 (15 May 2023)
M.M obo L.N.M v MEC for Health, Gauteng (2018/4531) [2023] ZAGPJHC 464 (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE – Nursing staff – Care of child –
Admitted for investigation into seizure –
Mother leaving
child in care of nursing staff – Child left alone and locked
in ward – Attempting to climb out
window and sustaining
burns from a wall heater – Medical staff could reasonably
have foreseen that the toddler would
at some point start looking
for her mother – Expected of a reasonable health service
provider or nurse to ensure that
the toddler was watched over or
supervised – MEC 100% liable for agreed or proven damages.
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2018/4531
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
M M obo L
N
M
Plaintiff
And
MEC
FOR HEALTH, GAUTENG
Neutral
citation:
M
M obo L N M v MEC for Health, Gauteng
(Case
No. 2018/4531) [2023] ZAGPJHC 464 (12 May 2023)
Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be 15 May 2023.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
JUDGMENT
# CARRIM AJ:
CARRIM AJ:
Introduction
[1] In this matter,
the plaintiff, in her representative capacity as the biological
mother and natural guardian of the minor
child L N M, issued summons
against the defendant for damages arising from the alleged negligence
of the nursing and medical staff
at the Tambo Memorial Hospital
(“hospital”).
[2]
The matter was certified trial ready on 8 August 2022, when an order
was made that the issue of merits be separated from
the quantum of
the plaintiff’s claims.
[1]
[3] After several
attempts to settle the matter, the parties came before me on 9 May
2023, on an agreed stated case in terms
of Uniform Rule 33. I
was required to decided only the issue of merits, in particular the
question of negligence on the part
of the employees of the
defendant.
Agreed Case
[4]
The agreed facts are as follows:
4.1.
The minor child L had been admitted to the hospital on 14 June 2017,
as an inpatient for investigation
of the cause and treatment of
seizures after having suffered a seizure at home.
4.2.
The admission diagnosis of 14 June 2017 was seizures.
4.3.
The plaintiff stayed with the minor child but left
the hospital the following morning, on 15 June 2017, to go home for a
bath and
to clean up.
4.4.
The plaintiff left the child in the care of the
nursing staff when she went home.
4.5.
At the time of admission to hospital, the minor
child had no injuries. She suffered burns on 15 June 2027, at
approximately
07h07.
4.6.
Upon the plaintiff’s return to the hospital
later that morning, she found her child with bandages to treat a burn
to her left
leg.
4.7.
The plaintiff was informed by the hospital staff
her child was burned by a wall-mounted heater, which the child came
into contact
with while she was attempting to leave the ward.
4.8.
The minor child was treated for her burn wounds
until she was discharged on 23 June 2017.
[5] The plaintiff
and the defendant have appointed the same expert in determination of
the merits, Dr Nosispho K Maponya a
paediatrician, the report for the
plaintiff can be found at 004-4 and for the defendant at 007-1.
[6] The parties agreed
that these reports should be admitted into evidence.
Dr Maponya’s
report(s)
[7]
In her report Dr Maponya records the following:
7.1.
“
L achieved her gross motor, fine motor,
speech and social development within normal limits.
7.2.
At 3 years started to have seizures was
admitted at Tambo Memorial Hospital Paediatric ward for investigation
of the cause and treatment
of seizures.
7.3.
On admission M left L with the nurses (M went
home to bath), on arrival she found her baby with bandage, was told
that L has burns
on the left leg.
7.4.
They told her L was burnt by the wall mounted
heater in the ward as she was trying to jump out of the window from
the ward.
7.5.
L was locked/left alone in the ward, she
started crying looking for her mother and tried to jump out of the
window because the doors
were locked.
7.6.
L was seen and treated by the plastic surgeon
and the wound dressing were changed regularly during the 2 weeks
hospital stay. She
continued with would dressing for 3 months post
discharge (wound healed).
7.7.
Hospital management was informed about the
incident.
7.8.
Attended physiotherapy sessions from admission
date for contractures and scar management.
7.9.
Never had seizures post discharge.”
[8]
In her report for the plaintiff, Dr Maponya concludes that L’s
burn wound and
keloids formation is as a result of negligent medical
staff at Tambo Memorial Hospital.
[2]
She
recommends that L be referred to a plastic and reconstruction surgeon
to manage and reconstruct the scar and keloid formations.
She
also recommends that the family be referred to a psychologist to
manage the post traumatic disorder that occurred after the
burn
incident.
[9]
In her report for the defendant, Dr Maponya makes the same concluding
remarks namely
that L’s burn wounds and its complications are
as a result of negligent medical staff. She makes the same
recommendations
for referral to a plastic and reconstruction surgeon
and a psychologist. In addition, she recommends that L be
referred to
an occupational therapist and physiotherapist to maximise
the gross motor skills of her lower limbs.
[3]
The dispute
[10]
Notwithstanding the agreed stated facts set out above the defendant
disputes that the hospital
staff were negligent.
[11]
The plaintiff submitted that the defendant had not challenged Dr
Maponya’s findings and
had not set out the basis upon which it
had rejected her findings. Further, the hospital staff were clearly
negligent. The
nurse locked the ward, left the toddler who was
already traumatised in the ward with hazardous material i.e. a wall
heater that
was left on, without supervision.
[12]
The defendant argued that the injuries (burn) sustained by the minor
child was because she attempted
to climb out of the window. Given
that it was not foreseeable that the minor child would try to climb
out of the window, such harm
could not be foreseeable.
[13]
When asked why the defendant was still persisting with this argument,
given that it was common
cause that the ward had been locked, that
the child had no other way of leaving, and that the child was left
unsupervised with
the wall heater on,
[4]
Adv
Maimele appearing on behalf of the defendant submitted that he could
not take the matter any further.
Analysis
[14]
In
Kruger
v Coetzee
[5]
the
Appellate Division (as it was then) held that in an action for
damages alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s
negligence, for the purposes of liability
culpa
only
arises when three requirements are met if a
diligens
paterfamilias
in
the position of the defendant:
14.1.
would have foreseen the reasonable possibility of
his conduct injuring another in his person or his property;
14.2.
would have taken reasonable steps to have guarded
against such occurrence; and
14.3.
the defendant failed to take such steps.
[15]
The principles enunciated in
Kruger
v Coetzee
have
been applied in several cases. In
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
[6]
the Constitutional
Court
at
para [31] confirmed the approach developed by Holms JA in determining
whether PRASA was negligent:
15.
15.1.
“
Would a reasonable person in PRASA's position have
reasonably foreseen harm befalling Mr Mashongwa as a result of
the absence
of security guards or the open doors? If so, would she
have taken reasonable steps to prevent harm to Mr Mashongwa?
If she would, did PRASA take reasonable steps to avert the
foreseeable harm that ultimately occurred?”
[16]
Turning to the facts of this case, it is common knowledge that young
children when separated from their mothers are likely
to become
distressed. More so a child in the place of L who had
suffered the recent trauma of a seizure, who was now
placed in
unfamiliar and strange surroundings and whose mother had just left
her. Children of such tender years in such circumstances
are likely
to start crying and looking for their mothers.
[17]
In my view the medical staff at the hospital – who are
purportedly trained to take care of patients generally and
in the
case of patients as young as L specifically – could reasonably
have foreseen that the toddler would at some point
start looking or
crying for her mother. In such circumstances, it would be
expected of a reasonable health service provider
or nurse to ensure
that the toddler was watched over or supervised and where needed, to
soothe the child in the absence of the
mother.
The
hospital staff failed to take such steps.
[18]
I disagree with the defendant’s submission that the harm
caused to L was because she tried to climb out of the window.
The child could have just as easily fallen against the wall heater
and sustained burn wounds. Left unsupervised, she could
have
hurt herself in any other way.
[19]
Accordingly, I find that the conduct of the hospital staff, employees
of the defendant, was negligent
and make the following order:
Order
1.
The defendant is liable for 100% of the damages
suffered by the plaintiff, in her representative capacity agreed and/
or proven
as a result of burns of L N M on 15 June 2017.
- The defendant shall pay
the plaintiff’s taxed or agreed High Court costs of suit as
between party and party in respect of
merits including:
The defendant shall pay
the plaintiff’s taxed or agreed High Court costs of suit as
between party and party in respect of
merits including:
2.1
the costs of counsel for preparation and
appearance.
2.2
All reasonable costs, for obtaining medico -legal
reports of
Dr NK Maponya,
including
consultation, preparation, and participation in meetings in respect
of the determination of the plaintiff’s claim
in her
representative capacity on behalf of the minor child.
2.3
The costs shall be paid in accordance with the
provisions of
section 3(a)(i)
of the
State Liability Act 20 of 1957
as amendment.
- The
issue of quantum is postponedsine die.
The
issue of quantum is postponed
sine die
.
Y CARRIM
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
For
the plaintiff:
Adv
MO Mudimeli
Instructed
by:
Nhlapo
Moloto Associates Attorneys
For
the defendant:
Adv
M Maimele
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
09
May 2023
Date
of judgment:
15
May 2023
[1]
Section
010
-
3
of CaseLines.
[2]
Section
004
-
9
of CaseLines.
[3]
Section
007
-
4
of CaseLines.
[4]
Section
016
-
4
of CaseLines.
[5]
1966
(2) SA 428 (A).
[6]
[2016]
JOL 34753
(CC).
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