Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 961South Africa
C.R.S v Road Accident Fund (1884/2006) [2023] ZAGPJHC 961 (19 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## C.R.S v Road Accident Fund (1884/2006) [2023] ZAGPJHC 961 (19 June 2023)
C.R.S v Road Accident Fund (1884/2006) [2023] ZAGPJHC 961 (19 June 2023)
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sino date 19 June 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO
:
1884/2006
DATE
:
19-06-2023
In
the matter between
S:
C R
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
J U D G M E N T
KHAN,
AJ
:
The
Plaintiff claims for special and general damages in respect of a
motor vehicle collision that occurred on 28 October 2001. The
Plaintiff was a 4 months old baby at the date of the accident. She
was restrained in a car seat but the restraints of the baby
chair
came loose. The Plaintiff was transported to hospital and treated for
a head injury arising from intracranial pressure. Plaintiff
was
discharged from hospital after 4 days in High Care for observation.
The
Plaintiff, who is now 22 years of age, alleges that she suffered a
soft tissue injury, a head injury, bruising to the forehead
and
bleeding of the mouth. A traumatic brain injury of moderate severity
is also alleged.
The
defence of the Road Accident Fund was struck off by way of order of
court dated 24 February 2022. The Plaintiffs initial Particulars
of
Claim sought a prayer for payment of R206 821.80 (inclusive of R
80 000 for future loss of income and R 100 000
for General
Damages). A further amended particulars of claim visited a claim of
R3million for loss of income and R900 000
for general damages.
By 15 August 2023, being a week before this default judgment
application, a further amendment was affected.
The claim is now
presented as R 10 369 255.80 (comprising R 9062 434.00 for
Loss of Income and R1 300 000 for
General Damages).
It is
unclear what effect such an amendment would have on a Defendants
rights before court, under circumstances where the defence
(sometimes
formulated in court orders as the plea) was struck off. It is unclear
if such a Defendant would be entitled to again
enter the fray. I
speculate that a defendant could have taken a financial view not to
oppose a lesser claimed quantum on the basis
of a variety of
considerations, including a prohibitive costs of litigation. Once the
complexion of a matter changes, a Defendant
might very well to be
allowed to enter the litigation once more. This is however moot as
the Defendant in this matter sought no
such prayer.
The
Plaintiff presented documentary evidence in support of the
application for default judgment by way of expert reports and
academic
results of the Plaintiff. Noteworthy is that the Plaintiff
achieved 5 “A” symbols (with her highest achieved mark
being
89%) in her matric final examination. The Plaintiff went on to
enrol at UNISA for a Bachelor of Arts Degree with a major in law,
which she completed and is now busy with her LLB degree. Plaintiff
excelled with a number of distinctions throughout her tertiary
studies. The Plaintiffs July 2023 results (with various course result
still outstanding) reflect varying results from distinctions
to a
fail in one subject.
A
battery of medico legal reports (inclusive of various updated reports
filed as late as July 2023) have been made available for
purposes of
default judgment. This again invites a consideration of whether the
order striking off the Defendants defence remains
of effect, in light
of the ever-evolving case being presented by the Plaintiff. Once a
Plaintiff alleges further injuries and sequalae
in support of a
higher amended quantum, then this is essentially a new case and the
Plaintiff is on the horns of a dilemma of either
abandoning such new
version that is before the court, postponing the matter to allow the
Defendant to adequately consider its position,
particularly when
addendum reports are being filed a month before the matter is before
court, alternatively the order of the dismissal
of the defence
becomes superceded and the Defendant is once again allowed to place a
version before the court. This is further
complicated in Road
Accident Fund litigation where the proof of the matter is heavily
reliant on medico-legal reports and such
reports are not in pursuance
of any party’s interests but for the benefit of the court. In
such circumstances the Road Accident
Fund would have been hamstrung
in calling on the Plaintiff to attend medico legal examinations in
terms of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
The
report of Dr Herman Edeling (a registered Neurosurgeon whose current
practical in-theatre neurosurgery experience is undocumented
in the
papers before me) surmises that the Plaintiff suffers from, inter
alia, right ear hearing loss, an unsteady gait, depression,
anxiety,
pain as well as an organic primary diffuse brain injury (an
academically documented term used to infer a brain injury
from
surrounding circumstances such as delusions and hallucinations). His
finding is bolstered by his description of the Plaintiffs
mothers
injuries, who is reported by the neurosurgeon to have sustained
fractured ribs, fractured hands and a fractured pelvis
in the same
collision. He goes on to find a subtle cognitive mental
impairment and thus surmises this will result in impaired
learning
capacity (despite her scholastic and university results indicating
otherwise). His finding concludes that the Plaintiffs
injuries will
result in what he describes as ‘significant life changing
sequelae’. Dr Barlan (an orthopedic surgeon)
found no
orthopedic injuries that warranted a medico legal report and declined
to furnish a full medico legal report. An eye specialist
similarly
could not identify any signs of post traumatic visual impairment.
CPRD and Associates, a
firm of psychologists who report themselves as having an interest in
Psychomotor research, report the Plaintiff
as having difficulties
concentrating. They also record Plaintiff as denying having a
problems with her temper, concentration or
getting headaches,
contrary to the findings of other medico legal experts in this
matter. Plaintiff does report depression, anxiety
and dizzyness when
she stands up from a seated position. Despite concerns about the
Plaintiffs slower than normal auditory and
visual processing, she
obtained her drivers licence some 14 months ago. The expert concludes
that Plaintiff may not be a safe driver.
The
ENT Surgeon, Dr Bouwer found the Plaintiff to have a possible ear
infection in the middle ear which is affecting the Plaintiffs
hearing
with no handicap arising from the motor vehicle collision.
The
Psychiatrist (in a report dated 7 July 2023 in respect of an
assessment on 21 June 2021) finds generalised anxiety, obsessive
compulsive disorder, and bipolar disorder. The conclusion is that the
Plaintiff will suffer long term emotional and behavioural
sequelae as
a result of the accident.
The
Occupational Therapist records receiving an instruction letter from
the Plaintiffs attorneys recording a “severe brain
injury”
(as opposed to the mild injury recorded by the experts). She finds
that the plaintiff will not cope in high stress
environments
(including that of a lawyer as she aspires to be).
Elanor
Bubb (a clinical and educational psychologist) who records herself as
having an interest in Neuropsychology finds that despite
the
Plaintiff achieving academically, she would have to be accommodated
in an employment environment and that a sympathetic employer
being
required. Plaintiff would also require psychiatric intervention.
The
Industrial Psychologist, Dr Bosman, having regard to the alleged
brain injury and the emotional issues being experienced by
the
Plaintiff, concludes that the Plaintiff would not be able to achieve
her pre-accident career potential and recorded that the
Plaintiff was
undecided at an earlier juncture as to whether she would practice law
or enter academia. He finds that the Plaintiff
would have entered the
labour market with a Masters degree and would probably have achieved
her PhD at some point in her career.
Now that the accident
intervened, the Plaintiff would take an extra year to complete her
qualification and suffer in her earning
path by not achieving her
true potential.
On
the morning of the application for default judgment, I was asked to
stand the matter down on the basis that the Road Accident
Fund had
now become keen to settle the matter. During the morning, I was
furnished with a draft settlement order in terms whereof
the
Plaintiff would be paid an amount of R 3 194 191. This
against a backdrop of a pleaded claim for loss of earning
of R
9 062 434. I refused to make this agreement an order of
court in light of certain concerns that I had earlier raised
regarding the veracity of the sequelae now being alleged some 22
years later. I was then requested by Counsel for Plaintiff to
remove
the matter from the roll. I refused as I had read the papers and was
ready to attend to this matter on the default judgment
roll.
In
the face of the medico legal reports presented by Plaintiff, it might
very well be that Plaintiff is not fit and proper to be
admitted as a
legal practitioner, which would have an impact on her claim.
Plaintiff might also not qualify to hold a drivers licence
or be a
safe driver on public roads. This would again impact her claim. I
also raised questions regarding the assessment and finding
of the
brain injury some 22 years later (based on the reports furnished and
in the absence of Plaintiff calling any of the experts
to testify
before court).
Despite
not being referred to any authority, I am alive to the recent Supreme
Court of Appeal decision of
Road
Accident Fund v Taylor and other matters
[2023] ZASCA 64
(8 May
2023). The court held at
[31] as
follows ‘Where the misappropriation of public funds is properly
raised before a court, it must, of course, deal
with it decisively
and without fear, favour or prejudice. But a court has no general
duty or power to exercise oversight over the
expenditure of public
funds. This is so for three main reasons. The first is the
constitutional principle of separation of powers.
The second is that
the exercise of such a duty or power would infringe the
constitutional rights of ordinary citizens to equality
and to a fair
public hearing. The third is the principle that the law constrains a
court to decide only the issues that the parties
have raised for
decision. See
Magistrates
Commission and Others v Lawrence
[2021]
ZASCA 165
;
2022
(4) SA 107
SCA
para 78-79. A perception that a system of state administration is
broken, is not a licence to disregard fundamental principles
of
procedural or substantive law.’
The
court went on to state (at 51) that a court has no power or
jurisdiction to embark upon an enquiry into the merits of the matter.
This would have been the final word on the matter but the
Constitutional Court is currently seized with the matter of Mafisa v
Road Accident Fund, which matter has been argued and is awaiting a
judgment. This matter turns on whether a Presiding Officer
is
entitled to unilaterally reduce a sum agreed in respect of loss of
future earning capacity. Such a finding will no doubt have
a profound
effect on this field of law and the manner in which courts are able
to attend to settlements concluded by Organs of
State. No doubt,
Taylor will be implicated in such a judgment as well as the present
matter.
In the circumstances, I
make the following order:
- This
application for default judgment is postponedsine
die;
This
application for default judgment is postponed
sine
die
;
- This
application may not be re-enrolled prior to the decision of the
Constitutional Court in the matter ofMafisa
v Road Accident Fund CCT 156 / 2022
This
application may not be re-enrolled prior to the decision of the
Constitutional Court in the matter of
Mafisa
v Road Accident Fund CCT 156 / 2022
- The
costs of this application for default judgment are reserved.
The
costs of this application for default judgment are reserved.
Z KHAN AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE
:
23 August 2023
For
Plaintiff
Attorney: Erasmus De
Klerk Inc
Counsel: Adv Danie
Combrink
For
Defendant
State Attorney –
Johannesburg
Ms Talenta Tivana
This judgment is uploaded
and notified to the parties electronically and is deemed to be
delivered on 24 August 2023.
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