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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## G.E.P obo M.F.L v MEC for The Department of Health Gauteng Provincial Government (33632/2014)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 535 (22 May 2023)
G.E.P obo M.F.L v MEC for The Department of Health Gauteng Provincial Government (33632/2014)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 535 (22 May 2023)
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sino date 22 May 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case number:
33632/2014
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
22.05.23
In
the matter between:
G.E.P
obo M.M.L
Plaintiff
And
MEC
FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
Defendant
NEATRAL CITATION:
G
E P abo M M L vs MEC for The Department of Health Gauteng Provincial
Government (
Case number: 33632/2014)
[2023] ZAGJHC 535 22 May
2023
Delivery:
The
judgment was delivered electronically through email to the legal
representatives and shall be uploaded on to Caselines. The
judgment
shall be deemed to be delivered on 22
May 2023
.
Summary:
Application
– absolution from the instance. Rule 39(6) read with rule
39(20) of the Uniform Rules of the High Court. Rule
39(6) provides
that absolution from the instance may be raised at the close of the
plaintiff’s case. The applicant raised
the absolution before
the closure of the plaintiff’s case. The applicant contended
that it is entitled to raise absolution
before the closure of the
plaintiff’s in the circumstances where the plaintiff had a
hopeless case and that the court should
apply the provisions of rule
39(20) of the Rules. Rule 39 (20) provides the court with the
discretion to vary the procedure provided
for in that rule. The
applicant seeking absolution on the ground that the plaintiff’s
main expert witness, the gynaecologist
and paediatrician was hopeless
and failed to establish a
prema facie
case for the plaintiff.
The application failed on
the ground that the plaintiff’s case was based on three grounds
of negligence and not limited to
those that on which the
gynaecologist testified. The application failed also on the ground
that there was no basis upon which the
court could invoke the
provisions of rule 39 (20) of the Rules.
The applicant’s
alternative prayer was to have rule 39(6) of the Rules declared
inconsistent with the Constitution in that
it only allowed absolution
for those defendants where the plaintiff has closed his or her case.
The application dismissed and rule
39(6) declared not to be
inconsistent with the Constitution.
JUDGMENT
MOLAHLEHI
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an interlocutory application, in the form of
absolution from the instance in terms of Rule 39(6), read with Rule
39(20)
of the Uniform Rules of Court (“the Rules”) by the
applicant, the defendant in the main action. The main action concerns
a damages claim instituted by the mother on behalf of the minor child
whose health it is alleged was compromised both at birth
and during
his stay after admission in the hospital.
[2]
The applicant, the defendant in the main action, seeks
absolution from the instance following the testimony of three of the
plaintiff’s
witnesses in the main action. The application is
brought before the plaintiff closes her case and in a situation where
intends
calling more expert witnesses. The parties will, for
convenience and ease of reference, be referred to as cited in the
main
action, the plaintiff and defendant.
[3]
The defendant, in the notice of motion, seeks an order in the
following terms:
“
(1) That
Rule 39(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court applies prior to the close
of the first respondent's/plaintiff's case by
invoking Rule 39(20) of
the Uniform Rules of Court and section 173 of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, Act 108
of 1996.Thereby to allow the
applicant/defendant to address the court after the end of the
evidence of the first and primary medico-legal
expert, Dr Sevenster,
the obstetrician/gynaecologist upon whose evidence the first
respondent's/plaintiff's entire case hinges
on. In order that the
applicant/defendant can show at this stage that the first
respondent/plaintiff has failed to make out a
prima
facie
case.
(2) Alternatively, to
declare, that Rule 39(6) of the Uniform Rules of Court, is
unconstitutional and invalid, in terms of section
172(1)(a) and (b)
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, Act 108 of 1996,
in that it violates the applicant's/defendant's
rights to equality,
dignity, access to court in a fair public hearing.”
Background facts
[4]
This matter, which has been subjected to a protracted case
management process dating back to before 18 April 2018, involves the
action instituted by the plaintiff against the defendant during
September 2014. The plaintiff’s claim
is
based on damages arising from the alleged negligence of the defendant
during the plaintiff’s labour and birth, including
his stay in
the hospital in November 2010.
[5]
The case of the plaintiff is that the minor child who was born on 30
November 2010 at the defendant’s Tambo Memorial Hospital,
suffered a severe injury to his brain whilst in the care of the
defendant. The complaint about the failure to provide the child
with
proper care includes the period when he was in the hospital receiving
treatment. The cerebral palsy has left the minor
child with
permanent disability to the extent that he will never be able to look
after himself.
[6]
The plaintiff’s cause of action is based in general on the
complaint that the Tambo Memorial Hospital having accepted
and
admitted the plaintiff and the minor child as patients it failed to
provide them with the necessary medical care for their
health and
well-being. This include the complaint that the hospital failed to
provide the necessary care before and after the birth
of the minor
child. The details relating to the cause of action as pleaded by the
plaintiff are set out in her particulars of claim
which I do not deem
necessary to repeat in this judgment.
[7]
The defendant, in its plea, denied liability and contended that there
was no causal connection between the alleged negligence
and the minor
child’s cerebral palsy.
[8]
This matter initially served before a case management process on 21
January 2020. On that day, the matter was postponed to 29
January
2020 for the parties to supplement their Practice Note. However, on
that day the matter was postponed because the defendant
insisted that
the minor child needed to be tested for Huntington’s disease
before the trial could proceed. The defendant
insisted on the test on
the basis that the cerebral palsy could be attributed to the genetic
disposition of the minor child’s
father.
[9]
The plaintiff’s Counsel objected to the minor child being
subjected to the test as that was, according to him, not in
line with
the international protocol. The matter was postponed with a directive
that the defendant should file an application compelling
the
plaintiff to submit the minor child to be tested for Huntington’s
disease. The matter was then postponed to February
2020 for the
adjudication of the application to compel.
[10]
On 6 February 2020, the plaintiff consented to subjecting the minor
child to the test for Huntington disease, which came out
negative.
Following that, further case management meetings were held, resulting
in the trial of the part-heard being set down for
31 October 2022
until November 2022.
[11]
The trial proceeded on 31 October 2022 and after the finalisation of
the evidence of Dr Sevenster, the gynaecologist/obstetrician
for the
plaintiff, the matter had to be postponed because the defendant
requested an opportunity to file this application. It should
be noted
that at this stage, the plaintiff had already presented the evidence
of Mrs P, the plaintiff, Dr Scheepers, the nursing
expert and Dr
Sevenster.
Absolution
from the instance
[12]
As indicated above, the relief in prayer 1 of the notice of motion is
sought in terms of Rule 39(6) of the Rules which reads
as follows:
"At
the close of the case for the plaintiff, the defendant may apply for
absolution from the instance, in which case the defendant
or one
advocate on his behalf may address the court and the plaintiff or one
advocate on his behalf may reply. The defendant or
his advocate may
thereupon reply on any matter arising out of the address of the
plaintiff or his advocate."
[13]
The defendant further requested the court to vary the established
practice of allowing an application for absolution at the
close of
the plaintiff’s case. The request to vary the provisions of the
rule is based on the fact that the application was
launched before
the close of the plaintiff’s case. The request is made in terms
of rule 39(20) of the Rules and section 172
of the Constitution.
[14]
Rule 39(20) of the Rules reads as follows:
"If
it appears convenient to do so, the court may at any time make any
order with regard to the conduct of the trial as to
it seems meet,
and thereby vary any procedure laid down by this rule."
[15]
Section 172 of the Constitution reads as follows:
"Powers
of courts in constitutional matters-
1.
When deciding a constitutional matter within its power, a court-
(a)
must declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent with the
Constitution is invalid to the extent of its constitutional
inconsistency; and
(b)
may make any order that is just and equitable, including-
(i)
an order limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of
invalidity; and
(j)
(ii) an order suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period
and on any condition, to allow the competent authority
to correct the
defect …"
[16]
An absolution from the instance application is generally brought at
the end of the plaintiff’s case, when the plaintiff
does not
appear when the trial is called or at the conclusion of the whole
case.
[17]
The
test to apply in considering an application for absolution is not
that the evidence led by the plaintiff established a case
that would
be sustained if the case was to proceed to its final conclusion. The
essential inquiry in determining whether to grant
absolution from the
instance is whether there is evidence upon which a court, when
applying its mind reasonably, could or might
find for the plaintiff.
In other words, a court would not grant absolution from the instance
in a case where the plaintiff has,
at the end of his or her case,
presented an answerable case or
prima
facie
case.
The test, as stated in
Supreme
Service Station (1969) (Pvt) Ltd v Fox and Goodridge (Pvt) Ltd,
[1]
is
not
“
what
ought a reasonable court to do
”
at
the close of the defendant’s case.
Thus
the threshold required by the law, which the plaintiff has to satisfy
in opposing an application for absolution from the instance
at the
close of his or her case, is very low.
[18]
The
test for absolution was set out in
Claude
Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel,
[2]
as follows:
“
(W)hen absolution
from the instance is sought at the close of plaintiff’s case,
the test to be applied is not whether the
evidence led by plaintiff
establishes what would finally be required to be established, but
whether there is evidence upon which
a Court, applying its mind
reasonably to such evidence, could or might (not should, nor ought
to) find for the plaintiff. (
Gascoyne
v Paul and Hunter
,
1917 T.P.D 170
at 173;
Ruto
Flour Mills (Pty) Ltd v Adelson (2)
1958 (4) SA 307
(T).)”
## [19]InVan
Zyl N.O obo A.M v MEC for Health, Western Cape Provincial Department
of Health,[3]the
full bench of the Western Cape Division, noting what was said inErasmus
v Bosssaid:
[19]
In
Van
Zyl N.O obo A.M v MEC for Health, Western Cape Provincial Department
of Health,
[3]
the
full bench of the Western Cape Division, noting what was said in
Erasmus
v Boss
said:
“
In
Theron
v Behr
1918 C.P.D. 442
, Juta, J at p451, states that according to the
practice in this Court in later years Judges have become very loath
to decide upon
questions of fact without hearing all the evidence on
both sides.’
We in this territory have
always followed the practice of the Cape courts. In case of doubt at
what a reasonable court ‘might’
do, a judicial officer
should always, therefore, lean on the side of allowing the case to
proceed.”
The court further stated
at para 12:
“
12. I must
confess that, while orders for absolution do not appear to abound in
this court’s jurisdiction, I am not familiar
with this practice
in the Cape courts. But then again, there is no authority either of
which I am aware, that suggests that the
dictum
of the Chief Justice is wrong or is no longer applicable. Indeed, I
would have thought that in the constitutional era where s34
of the
Constitution, 1996 ensures access to the courts for the determination
of a civil suit in a “fair public hearing”,
it would be
inimical to the interests of justice (“
cause
an injustice
”)
not to continue to adopt such an approach. I leave it there.”
[20]
I align myself with the above sentiments. It would indeed be
against the interest of justice to grant absolution from the instance
on the basis of the poor performance of only one witness whose
evidence comes long before the plaintiff’s case is closed
and
more importantly when the evidence related to only one aspect of the
case. It is important to note that the evidence of the
gynaecologist
has little bearing on the other aspects of the case. It therefore
means endorsing the proposition made by the defendant
in this case
would deny the plaintiff a fair hearing and would amount to a denial
of access to justice in that the plaintiff would
be deprived of the
opportunity to ventilate all the issues she has raised in the in the
particulars of claim.
[21]
In support of its application, the defendant contends that the
plaintiff’s medical-negligence claim is based on two
contradictory
obstetrics scenarios, namely:
“
(a) the failure to
do a caesarean section timeously; and in the alternative,
(b)
performance of a caesarean section in circumstances when it was not
necessary and/or indicated, and as such the baby was
born prematurely
and subjected to all the risks and complications associated with such
prematurity.”
[22]
The defendant further states:
“
14
Of crucial importance is that there are no antenatal, admission to
hospital records or medical records on the caesarean
section that was
done.
15.
The Applicant has made a diligent search for these records, has not
been able to find them, and is not in possession of the
documents and
does not know whether such documents exist. The documents have not
been destroyed. And were never in the possession
of the chief
executive officer of the hospital. (CEO affidavit Tambo Memorial
Hospital, dated 25 January 2022 and Reply to plaintiff's
Rule 35(3)
Notice). The Applicant is still searching for the medical records and
should they be found, will make them available.
16.
Of crucial importance too, is that it is common cause that the baby
was born in an uncompromised state. The neonatal note records
that a
caesarean section was done for foetal distress on 30 November 2010 at
14h30. Male baby, preterm, with APGAR scores of 7,
9 and 9 after 1, 5
and 10 minutes respectively. Mass of 2,055kg, head circumference 32cm
and length 42cm. No resuscitation required.
17.
Consequently, the plaintiff's entire case is underpinned by
the evidence of the plaintiff's obstetrician, Dr Sevenster.”
[23]
The defendant criticised the evidence of Dr Sevenster for
contradicting the version of Mrs P. He was also accused of
contradicting
himself as to when the caesarean section took place or
ought to have been be done. The testimony of the expert witness is
attacked
also on the ground that he drew conclusions when there were
no facts to support same.
[24]
The defendant contended further that the case of the plaintiff
could not be sustained in light of the concession made by Dr
Sevenster
during cross examination that it was impossible to tell
what happened to cause the condition of the minor child.
[25]
Mrs P is criticised for being an unreliable witness who could
not remember some of the crucial facts to support her case.
Has the plaintiff
made out a case for absolution at this stage of the hearing?
[26]
The application for absolution in this matter has to be
assessed in the context where the defendant launched the application
after
the plaintiff had presented three witnesses in support of her
case. She gave notice in terms of rule 36(9)(a) of the Rules
that she wished to call four other witnesses, Dr Lewis,
paediatrician, Prof Davies, neonatologist and Prof Gericke,
geneticist.
These witnesses will, according to the plaintiff, testify
about the level of care and treatment of the minor child after his
birth
until he was discharged from the hospital, including the
circumstances of his collapse on 6 December 2010.
[27]
The defendant’s absolution application has to further be
assessed in the context of the plaintiff’s cause of action as
set out in the particulars of claim. To emphasise the point made
earlier, it is apparent from the plaintiff’s particulars
of
claim that the alleged negligence of the defendant is based
essentially on three periods. The first period concerns the alleged
failure to monitor and treat the mother and the foetus upon arrival
at the hospital on 29 November 2010. The second period concerns
the
alleged failure to adequately observe, monitor and treat the mother
and the foetus on 30 November 2010.The third period concerns
the
alleged failure to respond appropriately to the condition of the
minor child whilst in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
during the
period 30 November 2010 to 6 December 2010.
[28]
The evidence that has been led at this stage relates to the
first period of the alleged negligence on the part of the defendant,
namely, the antenatal labour period. The evidence relating to the
birth period and the period after the birth of the minor child
until
his discharge from the hospital, is still to be presented by the
plaintiff. It is thus clear from the reading of the particulars
of
claim as amended that the plaintiff’s case is not based only on
the “
two contradictory obstetrics scenarios
” as
alleged by the defendant in its founding affidavit in support of this
application.
[29]
The defendant’s contention that Dr Sevenster has in his
testimony dealt with the obstetrics period is indeed correct.
However,
he did not, as stated above, deal with the periods after the
birth of the minor child to the period when he was discharged from
the hospital. Thus granting the relief sought by the defendant in
this application would not only, cause an injustice but would
also
amount to a piecemeal approach to litigation.
[30]
In the circumstances, the defendant has failed to make out a
case for absolution from the instance and thus its application stands
to fail for this reason.
[31]
The defendant has also failed to present facts and circumstances that
would warrant the court invoking the provisions of rule
39(20) of the
Rules. In other words, in the circumstances of this case, there is no
basis for varying the procedure for the conduct
of the trial. In
other words, there is no basis to vary the well-established principle
that absolution has to be raised at the
closure of the plaintiff’s
case.
Is section 39(6) of
the Rules inconsistent with the Constitution?
[32]
The defendant’s
alternative prayer is that the court should declare rule 39(6) of the
Rules unconstitutional and invalid in
terms of section 172 of the
Constitution. The prayer is based on the contention that the rule
violates the defendant’s right
to equality, dignity and access
to court in fair public hearing.
[4]
The
defendant’s case in this respect is that its right to equality
is “
infringed
on the current wording of Rule 39 (6) as it gives one defendant more
rights than the other depending on the stage of the
trial.
”
In
other words, the rule denies the right of the defendant to invoke the
provisions rule at any stage of the trial (specifically
before the
closure of the plaintiff’s case) but confines that right only
to after the closure of the plaintiff’s case.
[33]
The defendant’s Counsel argued that the wording of rule 39(6)
of the Rules denies the defendant the right to a fair and
expeditious
determination and finalisation of a case where it is clear even
before the closure of the plaintiff’s case that
there is no
case to answer to or that the plaintiff has a
prima
facie
case. He further, argued that
in the circumstances of this case, the defendant is entitled to
invoke the rule because the plaintiff’s
case collapsed at the
end of the primary expert witness’s testimony, Dr Sevenster.
[34]
The other proposition made by the defendant’s Counsel is as
follows:
“
In
a medical negligence case, the case can collapse on the evidence of
the first and primary expert, as in this case, and why should
the
court and the defendant labour through a four or five of the other
experts of the plaintiff to the end of plaintiff's case
before the
Rule 39(6) can be invoked by the defendant.”
[35]
The essence of the defendant’s case, as I understand it, is
that the provisions of rule 39(6) of the Rules are inconsistent
with
the Constitution in that they limit the right to plead absolution
from the instance only to those cases where the plaintiff
has closed
his or her case.
[36]
The test to apply
in determining inconsistency in matters involving constitutional
issues was recently dealt with in
Seriti
and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others
.
[5]
In that case, the court referred to the test as described by the
Constitutional Court in
Ex
Parte Speaker of the Kwazulu-Natal Provincial Legislature: In Re
Certification of the Constitution of the Province of
Kwazulu-Natal,
[6]
as
follows:
“
It
is important to stress that we are here dealing with the concept of
inconsistency as it is to be applied to provisions in a provincial
bill of rights which fall within the provincial legislature's
competence but which operate in a field also covered by Chapter 3
of
the interim Constitution. For purposes of section 160 there is a
different and perhaps even more fundamental type of inconsistency,
namely where the provincial legislature purports to embody in its
constitution, whether in its bill of rights or elsewhere, matters
in
respect whereof it has no power to legislate pursuant to the
provisions of section 126 or any other provision of the interim
Constitution. For purposes of the present enquiry as to inconsistency
we are of the view that a provision in a provincial bill
of rights
and a corresponding provision in Chapter 3 are inconsistent when they
cannot stand at the same time, or cannot stand
together, or cannot
both be obeyed at the same time. They are not inconsistent when it is
possible to obey each without disobeying
either. There is no
principal or practical reason why such provisions cannot operate
together harmoniously in the same field.”
[37]
The
issue of who bears the onus in cases of this nature was dealt with by
the Constitutional Court in
Ferreira
v Levine No and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell No and
Others,
[7]
as
follows:
“
The
task of determining whether the provisions of section 417(2)(b) of
the Act are invalid because they are inconsistent with the
guaranteed
rights here under discussion involves two stages first, an enquiry as
to whether there has been an infringement of the
section 11(1) or 13
guaranteed right; if so, a further enquiry as to whether such
infringement is justified under section 33(1),
the limitation clause.
The task of interpreting the Chapter 3 fundamental rights rests, of
course, with the Courts, but it is for
the applicants to prove the
facts upon which they rely for their claim of infringement of the
particular right in question. Concerning
the second stage, "[it]
is for the legislature, or the party relying on the legislation, to
establish this justification (in
terms of section 33(1) of the
Constitution), and not for the party challenging it, to show that it
was not justified."
[38]
The focus with regard to the above relates to the question of
interpretation and limitation. The duty to show that the
infringement,
in this instance by the provisions of rule 39(6) as
alleged by the defendant, has taken place rests with the defendant.
To sustain
this duty, the defendant has to produce facts that support
its proposition that the rule is inconsistent with the Constitution.
If the defendant was to be successful, then the plaintiff would have
to show that the infringement is a justified limitation in
terms of
section 36 of the Constitution.
[39]
In general, a party seeking a relief of a variation in terms of
section 172(1)(b)(i) or (ii) of the Constitution has to justify
such
a request. It is clear from the reading of the papers before
this court and the arguments advanced that the challenge
to the
constitutionality of rule 39(6) of the Rules by the defendant is
unsustainable. Therefore, the defendant’s alternative
prayer to
have the rule declared invalid for being inconsistent with the
Constitution stands to fail.
Order
[40]
In the circumstances the following order is made:
1.
The defendant’s application for absolution from the instance is
dismissed.
2.
The application to declare rule 39 (6) of the Rules to be
inconsistent with the Constitution is dismissed.
3.
Rule 39(6) is declared not to be inconsistent with the Constitution.
4.
The applicant is to pay the costs of this application, including the
costs of employing two counsel.
E
MOLAHLEHI
Judge
of the High Court, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant/defendant:
Adv
U R D Mansingh
Attorney
for the Applicant/defendant:
The
State Attorney.
Counsel
for the plaintiff/ first respondent
Adv
MJ Fourie
And
JA Du Plessis
Attorney
for the plaintiff/ first respondent:
PG
De Freitas
Hearing
date: 22 March 2023
Delivered:
22 May 2023.
[1]
1995
(1) ZLR 87(S).
[2]
1976
(4) SA 403. (AD).
## [3](A138/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 133; [2023] 1 All SA 501 (WCC) (4 July 2022).
[3]
(A138/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 133; [2023] 1 All SA 501 (WCC) (4 July 2022).
## [4]The
issues ofdefendant’s
right to equality, dignity and access to court in a fair public
hearingare
dealt with in Sections 7(1), 7(2), 8 and 34 of the Constitution. of
1996.
[4]
The
issues of
defendant’s
right to equality, dignity and access to court in a fair public
hearing
are
dealt with in Sections 7(1), 7(2), 8 and 34 of the Constitution. of
1996.
## [5]32193/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 332 (14 April 2023).
[5]
32193/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 332 (14 April 2023).
## [6]
1996
(11) BCLR 1419; 1996 (4) SA 1098 (6 September 1996).
[6]
1996
(11) BCLR 1419; 1996 (4) SA 1098 (6 September 1996).
[7]
1996
(1) SA 984
(CC).
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