Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 869South Africa
Sithole v Road Accident Fund (2021/4279) [2023] ZAGPJHC 869 (28 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 July 2023
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sithole v Road Accident Fund (2021/4279) [2023] ZAGPJHC 869 (28 July 2023)
Sithole v Road Accident Fund (2021/4279) [2023] ZAGPJHC 869 (28 July 2023)
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sino date 28 July 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2021/4279
NOT
REPORTABLE
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
SITHOLE:
AARON SIPHO
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
REQUEST FOR REASONS IN
TERMS OF RULE 49(1)(c)
THE FACTS:
1.
This matter came before me on the 18
th
of
July 2023 in one of the newly
created dedicated RAF Default Judgment Courts and which courts
commenced their operation on the 17
th
of
July 2023. When the matter was
called Adv D Grobbelaar appeared for the Plaintiff and Mr D Coetzee
from the State Attorney’s
Office on behalf of the Defendant.
2.
I was advised by Mr Coetzee that the
defendant entered and appearance to defend albeit at a very late
stage but did so under the
protection of Rule 19(5) which allows a
defendant to enter an appearance to defend even after the expiry of
the periods provided
for in subrules (1) and (2) of Rule 19, provided
it is before default judgment is granted. Rule 19(5) then continues
and states
that if the appearance to defend is entered after the
application for default judgment has been launched then the Plaintiff
shall
be entitled to his costs.
3.
Mr Coetzee advised that the defendant is
ready to proceed in respect of all issues but for the aspect of past
hospital and medical
expenses and in respect of which the defendant
wished to move an application for a postponement.
4.
No formal application for a postponement
had been prepared and Mr Coetzee presented the defendant’s case
from the Bar. If
I understood the application correctly it was based
on two premises:
4.1
An internal unit of the defendant called
“Bill Review” had not yet evaluated the claim for past
hospital and medical
expenses.
4.2
There is a pending application before the
Constitutional Court to appeal the matter of the
Road
Accident Fund and Discovery Health (Pty) Ltd and another CCT 106/2023
(“the Discovery matter”).
5.
Mr Coetzee was invited to address me on the
retrospective application of the Discovery matter, if the
Constitutional Court should
find in the Road Accident Fund’s
favour. He indicated that he is not able to do so and that he leaves
it in the Court’s
hands.
6.
The application was dismissed and the
parties were called upon to proceed with the matter in its totality.
7.
Both Mr Grobbelaar and Mr Coetzee had
uploaded Heads of Argument and which formed the basis of their
respective approaches to the
matter. After their respective arguments
were heard, the following contemporaneous Order was made:
7.1
By agreement
:
The Defendant is liable to compensate the Plaintiff for 100% of the
proven delictual damages suffered as a result of the motor
vehicle
collision which occurred on 9 June 2019.
7.2
The Defendant shall pay the capital amount
of R5 925 987.25 in full and final payment of the
Plaintiffs’ claim,
which is calculated as follows:
7.2.1 Past hospital and
medical expenses: R678 542.25
7.2.2 Past loss of
earnings: R182 890.00
7.2.3 Future loss of
earnings: R3 264 555.00
7.2.4 General damages:
R1 800 000.00
Total:
R5 925 987.25
7.3
In respect of future hospital, medical and
ancillary expenses the defendant shall furnish an Undertaking as is
provided for in Section
17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act.
7.4
Plaintiff is entitled to party and party
costs on the High Court scale.
7.5
The Order further made provision for a
Trust to be created and all details contained in the Order in respect
of the Trust were also
by agreement between the parties.
8.
On the 19
th
of
July 2023 the defendant requested
reasons in terms of Rule 49(1)(c) for the Order, referring
specifically to the following:
8.1
The quantum awarded to the plaintiff in
respect of his claim for non-pecuniary damages.
8.2
The reasons for refusing the defendant’s
application (made from the Bar) that the plaintiff’s claim for
past hospital
and medical expenses be postponed:
8.2.1
pending the outcome of the appeal
proceeding between the Defendant and Discovery Health (Pty) Ltd filed
in the Constitutional Court
under case number 106/2023.
8.2.2
in order to allow the Defendant an
opportunity to defend against the Plaintiff’s claim for past
hospital and medical expenses
on the basis provided for in terms of
Rule 19(5) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
9.
The Order made in respect of past loss of
income, future loss of income, future hospital, medical and ancillary
expenses as well
as costs stands unchallenged, leaving the
non-pecuniary damages and the aspect of the postponement of the
aspect of past hospital,
medical and ancillary expenses and which is
dealt with herein below.
THE LAW ON POSTPONEMENTS:
10.
A bare allegation of prejudice is not
sufficient, the Defendant must satisfy the Court that there is
prejudice or at least a reasonable
probability thereof.
11.
In
Vollenhoven
v Hanson and Mills
1970 (2) SA 368
C
at
373 it was stated:
“
It
is in the public interest that litigation should be disposed of as
speedily as possible. There is such a thing as the tyranny
of
litigation and in many cases, it cannot be said that the mere offer
of paying wasted costs would adequately compensate a respondent
for
any inconvenience suffered as a result of granting the postponement.”
12.
Any application for postponement must
always be
bona fide
and not simply used as a tactical maneuver for the purpose of
obtaining an advantage to which the applicant is not legitimately
entitled. See
Trading CC v Standard Bank
of SA Ltd
2004 (4) SA 1
(SCA)
at 4-5.
THE EVIDENCE IN RE THE
APPLICATION FOR A POSTPONEMENT
13.
In debating the matter of the postponement,
Mr Coetzee was asked when the defendant received notice for the first
time that there
is a claim for past hospital, medical and ancillary
expenses. Mr Coetzee did not have the information available. Mr
Grobbelaar
ventured that past hospital, medical and ancillary
expenses would have been submitted with the original claim, but no
evidence
was available to substantiate this allegation. What is
certain, and which was confirmed on behalf of all parties was that,
at the
latest, the defendant had knowledge of the complete claim for
past hospital and medical expenses at the time when it was uploaded
onto Caselines on 22 March 2022, (Caselines 007-1),15 months before
the date of the application.
14.
Mr Coetzee conceded that the “Bill
Review” unit has never looked at the vouchers and schedules
supporting the plaintiff’s
claim for past hospital and medical
expenses. Similarly, no indication could be given when, if ever, they
would look at it, unless
the defendant’s appeal to the
Constitutional Court does not find favour with that court.
15.
In contrast to the above Dr H J Schmidt,
whose affidavit is found at Caselines 007-187 to 007-189, confirms
under oath that he has
considered the injuries and the invoices
submitted to the defendant in respect of past hospital and medical
expenses and is satisfied
that all the invoices submitted relate to
treatment received by the plaintiff as a result of the injuries
sustained in the accident
which forms the basis of the plaintiff’s
claim against the defendant and that the treatment as rendered was
fair and reasonable.
16.
Dr Schmidt’s affidavit was never
challenged and having been admitted under Rule 38(2), constitutes the
confirmatory evidence
of the treatment received and the cost of that
treatment. This being the case, it becomes irrelevant what the
opinion of an internal
“Bill Reviewer” of the defendant
might be. That horse had bolted and the defendant’s opportunity
to contest the
invoices has expired.
17.
The alternative ground proffered by the
Defendant for the postponement of the claim for past hospital and
medical expenses, i.e.,
that the matter must stand over until such
time as the Constitutional Court has ruled on the Discovery matter,
will be dealt with
next.
18.
In this context there are three dates that
are important:
A)
The date of accident, when the cause of
action arose, being 9 June 2019.
B)
The date on which summons was issued, being
1 February 2021.
C)
The date of the defendant’s “Internal
Directive”, being 12 August 2022.
19.
The question that was posed to Mr Coetzee
was: “On what basis could the defendant aver that the Internal
Directive of the
defendant of 12 August 2022 would affect this
matter, even if the Constitutional Court were to find in favour of
the Defendant?”
20.
The Defendant declined to engage the court
and indicated the matter is left in the hands of the Court.
THE LAW ON
RETROSPECTIVITY
21.
In
Kaknis v
ABSA Bank Ltd and Another
2016 ZASCA 206
from paragraph 10 and further:
[10] I must mention
from the outset that I am alive to the existence of a strong
presumption that legislation is not intended to
be retroactive, –
nor retrospective (see
S v Mhlungu & others
[1995] ZACC 4
;
1995 (3) SA 867
(CC)
paras 65 – 67), where Kentridge AJ observed that:
[65] First, there is a
strong presumption that new legislation is not intended to be
retroactive. By retroactive legislation is
meant legislation which
invalidates what was previously valid, or vice versa, i.e. which
affects transactions completed before
the new statute came into
operation …. It is legislation which enacts that “as at
a past date the law shall be taken
to have been that which it was
not”. See
Shewan Tomes & Co Ltd v Commissioner of
Customs and Excise
1955 (4) SA 305
(A)
at 311H, per Schreiner
ACJ. There is also a presumption against reading legislation as being
retrospective in the sense that, while
it takes effect only from its
date of commencement, it impairs existing rights and obligations,
e.g. by invalidating current contracts
or impairing existing property
rights. See
Cape Town Municipality v F Robb & Co Ltd
1966 (4)
SA 345
(C)
at 351, per Corbett J. The general rule therefore is
that a statute is as far as possible to be construed as operating
only on
facts which come into existence after its passing.
[67] There is still
another well-established rule of construction namely, that even if a
new statute is intended to be retrospective
insofar as it affects
vested rights and obligations, it is nonetheless presumed not to
affect matters which are the subject of
pending legal proceedings.
See
Bell v Voorsitter van die Rasklassifikasieraad en Andere
(supra);
Bellairs v Hodnett and Another
(supra at 1148). ‟
[11] It is clear from
the above exposition in Mhlungu that the legal position relating to
the retrospective application of any statute
is settled in our law
and also in most foreign jurisdictions. In the case of
Yew Bon Tew
v Kenderaan Bas Mara
[1982] 3 All ER 833
at 836 Lord Brightman
said in this regard that: 'A statute is retrospective if it takes
away or impairs a vested right acquired
under existing laws, or
creates a new obligation, or imposes a new duty, or attaches a new
disability, in regard to events already
past. There is however said
to be an exception in the case of a statute which is purely
procedural, because no person has a vested
right in any particular
course of procedure, but only a right to prosecute or defend a suit
according to the rules for the conduct
of an action for the time
being prescribed. But these expressions „retrospective‟
and „procedural‟, though
useful in a particular context,
are equivocal and therefore can be misleading. A statute is
retrospective if it takes away or impairs
a vested right acquired
under existing laws, or creates a new obligation, or imposes a new
duty, or attaches a new disability,
in regard to events already
passed. There is, however, said to be an exception in the case of a
statute which is purely procedural,
because no person has a vested
right in any particular course of procedure, but only a right to
prosecute or defend a suit according
to the rules for the conduct of
an action for the time being prescribed.
23. Even if an “internal
directive” of the defendant and which is not aligned with the
Road Accident Fund Act, was capable
of being binding on third
parties, which it is not, certainly the approach regarding
retrospectivity would be similar to that which
has been set out in
the case law quoted above in the
Kaknis
and other matters. If
an organ of State is bound by the settled law, as referred to above,
how much more should it not be applicable
to an internal directive,
albeit for external application, in such an organisasion?
24. For the defendant’s
request and argument
in casu
to succeed the following must
happen:
a)
The Constitutional Court must descend into
the arena of contractual relationships to address the effect of the
Medical Schemes Act,
Act 131 of 1998 on Discovery in the context of
personal injury claims arising from motor vehicle accidents.
b)
It will have to set aside the principle of
subrogation as it applies in our delictual law.
c)
It will have to set aside the principle of
res inter alios acta
in respect of delictual claims.
d)
It will have to rule that its judgment has
retrospective effect in respect of all causes of action which arose
before the internal
directive of the RAF was issued on the 12
th
of
August 2022.
e)
It will have to rule that retrospectivity
also applies to matters in respect of which litigation had already
been joined.
25. The documents
uploaded by the Defendant on CaseLines under 019:9 and 019:10
indicate that the Road Accident Fund’s argument
in its
application to the Constitutional Court might cover a), b) and c)
above but not d) and e).
26. Accordingly and
considering the arguments and case law quoted in respect of
retrospectivity it does not matter what the constitutional
Court
decides in respect of the application that is before it, it will not
affect the claim and rights of the Plaintiff
in casu.
27.
The plaintiff’s evidence on the
value of the past hospital, medical expenses and ancillary expenses
stands substantiated and
uncontested and a postponement based on the
pending Constitutional Court matter, “the Discovery matter”,
will hold
no benefit for the defendant but would prejudice the
plaintiff..
28.The content of
paragraphs 10-27 above contain the reasoning why the application for
a postponement was refused.
NON-PECUNIARY DAMAGES
29. I am indebted to both
counsel for their assistance in this regard. Counsel for the
plaintiff uploaded comprehensive Heads of
Argument as well as a
separate section with the case law that the plaintiff believe would
be relevant. This is to be found on Caselines
in 019:4 from 019-80 to
019-87. The State attorney uploaded four matters and which may be
found on Caselines at 019:5 to 019:8.
30. The medico-legal
reports filed of record in this matter have been uploaded on
Caselines at 003:1. I do not intend to refer to
it in any detail.
What is relevant is the RAF 4 Serious Injury Assessment Form
completed by the neurosurgeon, Dr G Marus and which
may be found on
Caselines at 003-32 to 003-38. Dr Marus, having examined the
plaintiff and having prepared a comprehensive medico-legal
report,
also applied his mind to the question of Whole Person Impairment and
found the plaintiff to have a WPI of 47%. This finding
was not
contested and the Defendant, accordingly, accepted that the Plaintiff
was entitled to non-pecuniary damages.
31. From the medico-legal
reports filed of record the injuries and the more serious sequalae of
the injuries, appear to be the following:
31.1 A severe diffuse
brain injury that was complicated by a focal injury to the right
frontoparietal area.
31.2 long term cognitive
impairment was expected.
31.3 The Plaintiff had
difficulty with communicating, with indistinct speech with an element
of dysphasia (abnormal cell growth).
31.4 The Plaintiff has
diminished insight into the extent of his current physical and mental
problems.
31.5 The Plaintiff has
spastic left sided weakness which impairs co-ordination and ability
to walk adequately.
31.6 He will require
physical assistance with day-to-day home management.
31.7 He is incapable of
managing his own affairs.
31.8 He had been
medically boarded.
31.9 The Plaintiff
suffered blunt force trauma and a chest injury with right sided rib
fractures from 1-3, combined with right pneumothorax
and lung
contusion.
31.10
A facture of the right scapula;
(
technical
term for the
shoulder
blade
);
31.11 Multiple
lacerations of the scalp and face and multiple contusions.
32. In addition to the
case law submitted by both the Plaintiff and the Defendant I also
took cognizance of the following matters:
32.1 Khokho NO obo MG v
Road Accident Fund 2019 (7A4) QOD 125 (FB)
32.2 Mnguni v Road
Accident Fund 2010 (6E2) QOD 1 (GSJ)
32.3 Mohlaphuli NO v The
South Africa National Road Agency Ltd 2013 (6A4) QOD 146 (WCC)
32.4 Maribeng v Road
Accident Fund 2021 (8A4) QOD 39 (GNP)
33. Ultimately the
assessment of non-pecuniary damages is reduced to the opinion of the
presiding judge. None of the case law quoted
by either party is on
all fours with the injuries sustained by this plaintiff nor is the
further case law that the court considered.
All that the cases
provide are guidelines of what previous courts in more or less
similar matters have considered to be fair and
reasonable to both
parties.
34. Having considered all
the available case law referred to and considering it in conjunction
with the injuries as confirmed in
the medical evidence filed of
record, it was the opinion of the Court that an award of R1 800 000
in respect of non-pecuniary
damages would be fair and reasonable to
both parties as well as being in line with the reported and available
case law.
35. The above as is set
out in paragraphs 29-34 above contains the reasons for the amount
awarded in respect of non-pecuniary damages.
Weideman
AJ
JUDGE
GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv D
Grobbelaar
Counsel for the
Respondent:
Mr D Coetzee –
State Attorney
Date
of hearing: 18 July 2023
Date
of judgment: 28 July 2023
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