Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 887South Africa
Mathews v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (35083/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 887 (4 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 August 2023
Headnotes
by an unknown male person. He was severely injured. The unknown male person informed them that he found the plaintiff injured at the train station. The plaintiff informed them that he was pushed out of the moving train and fell. He used a bandage to cover the plaintiff’s head but it could not help because he was bleeding profusely. He then used the plaintiff’s work overall to cover his injured head. Thereafter, he and Winnie transported the plaintiff to Helen Joseph hospital with his car, a mazda 323. He left the plaintiff with Winnie at the hospital and went to their workplace to report the incident. He reported the incident to the manager. The plaintiff closed his
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mathews v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (35083/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 887 (4 August 2023)
Mathews v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (35083/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 887 (4 August 2023)
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sino date 4 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
35083/2019
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
04/08/23
In
the matter between:
NYAMBENI
MATHEWS
Plaintiff
and
PASSANGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Mdalana-Mayisela
J
Introduction
[1] The plaintiff
instituted an action against the defendant for delictual damages
arising from a train incident that occurred on
13 September 2019
between Croesus and Langlaagte train stations (“the incident”).
By agreement between the parties
the issues of liability and quantum
were separated in terms of rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
The issue of quantum was
postponed
sine die
. This court is
required to determine only the issue of the defendant’s
liability.
[2] In his amended
particulars of claim the plaintiff alleged
that
the defendant breached its legal duty through the omissions and/or
negligent conduct of its employees who, while acting within
the
course and scope of their employment with the defendant, were
negligent in one or more of the following respects:
[2.1] By failing to keep
the train under proper and adequate control;
[2.2] By operating or
allowing the train to be in motion, travelling between two train
stations while its doors were open;
[2,3] By failing to
ensure the safety of passengers including having a security guard
inside the train coach to ensure safety and
security towards lawful
commuters of trains belonging to the defendant;
[2.4] By allowing the
train to be overcrowded with commuters which posed a danger to
commuters more particularly as the train was
operating or travelling
with doors open;
[2.5] By failing to
safeguard the well-being of passengers and in particular the
plaintiff when by exercise of due and reasonable
care the defendant
could and should have done so;
[2.6] By failing to take
any precautions to prevent the plaintiff from falling;
[2.7] By allowing the
train to be in motion without ensuring that all train doors were
properly closed.
[3] The defendant’s
version is that it has no knowledge of the alleged incident because
it was not reported, and put the plaintiff
to the proof thereof.
Evidence
[4] To prove
his
case the plaintiff testified and called two witnesses, Sithole Martin
and Winnie Nambehe.
[5] The plaintiff
testified that in September 2019 he was residing at Lawley. He was
employed as a machine operator by Johannesburg
City Parks. In the
morning of 13 September 2019, he was a passenger in a train no 05
travelling from Grasmere to Johannesburg Park
Station. He was going
to work. He was inside carriage no 03 towards the back. The carriage
was full. It had two doors on each side
and they were left open while
the train was in motion. He was standing +- 4 meters from the
entrance and holding on the fixed iron
pole. He was in possession of
a valid monthly train ticket which he bought for R190.00. The train
ticket dated 1 September 2019
and expiring on 30 September 2019 was
handed up as evidence in court and marked exhibit “A”. It
was shown to the ticket
examiner when he boarded the train on
platform no 01 at Grasmere station in the morning on the day of the
incident.
[6] At Croesus station
many people boarded the train, and as a result there was pushing
inside carriage 03. Whilst the train was
in motion between Croesus
and Langlaagte train stations, overcrowded and with its doors left
open, he was pushed out of the train
through an open door. He fell in
a forward motion next to railway tracks. His face hit the ground and
his forehead was pierced
by the steel pipe. The train did not stop
where he fell. It nearly ran over his leg but he managed to quickly
pull himself away.
The spot where he fell was not far from Croesus
station and it was about 100 meters from the platform edge.
[7] While lying next to
railway tracks and bleeding from his forehead, he was assisted by an
unknown male person, who accompanied
him to Antia hostel. He exited
the Croesus train station through the access point situated on the
platform. There were no security
guards or ticket examiners on the
platform when he exited. If they were present, he was going to report
the incident and request
them to call an ambulance for him. On
arrival at Antia hostel his colleagues covered his head with a
bandage because he was bleeding
profusely. Sithole Bashin Martin and
Winnie Nembahe transported him with Sithole’s private car to
Helen Joseph hospital.
He was admitted in hospital for about two
weeks. The incident occurred before 7h00.
[8] Winnie Nembahe
testified she was working with the plaintiff at Johannesburg City
Parks from 2017 until he was laid off due to
his ill-health in
January 2020. On 13 September 2019 before 7h00, an unknown male
person came to Antia hostel holding the plaintiff
with his hand. At
that time, she and her colleague Martin Sithole were waiting for
their transport to go to work. The plaintiff
was bleeding profusely.
He looked unstable and dizzy. He had sustained an injury on his face
and forehead. It was not a good sight
of him. She and Martin
transported the plaintiff to Helen Joseph hospital. On their way to
hospital the plaintiff informed them
that he got pushed from the
moving train, he fell and sustained injuries. He also informed them
that the doors of the moving train
were not closed. The plaintiff was
admitted in hospital.
[9] Martin Sithole
testified he was working with the plaintiff at Johannesburg City
Parks from 1997 until he was laid off work due
to the injuries. In
the morning of the incident he and his colleagues were waiting for
their transport outside Antia hostel to
go to work. The Antia hostel
accommodates municipal workers. The plaintiff arrived with his hand
held by an unknown male person.
He was severely injured. The unknown
male person informed them that he found the plaintiff injured at the
train station. The plaintiff
informed them that he was pushed out of
the moving train and fell. He used a bandage to cover the plaintiff’s
head but it
could not help because he was bleeding profusely. He then
used the plaintiff’s work overall to cover his injured head.
Thereafter,
he and Winnie transported the plaintiff to Helen Joseph
hospital with his car, a mazda 323. He left the plaintiff with Winnie
at
the hospital and went to their workplace to report the incident.
He reported the incident to the manager. The plaintiff closed his
case.
[10] The defendant called
Sibongile Stuurman and Tsidiso Patrick Tsiu. Sibongile testified that
she is employed by the defendant
as an Access controller stationed at
Croesus train station. Her duty is to verify customers’ train
tickets at the access
point situated on the platforms. During her
testimony a sign-off document showing that she was on duty on the
13
th
of September 2019 from 05h00 to 12h30 at the access
point situated on the platform was produced and admitted as exhibit
“B”.
There are two platforms, and she could not remember
which platform she was working on. She did not see the plaintiff
exiting the
station. There was no other way to exit the station other
than through the access point. She did not have knowledge of which
employees
were posted at which areas at the station on the day of the
incident.
[11] Tsidiso testified
that he is employed by the defendant as a Croesus station manager
from 2016. He is responsible for the management
of ticket examiners,
access controllers and security guards. In September 2019, there were
security guards employed by the defendant
and those employed by Vusa
Isizwe Security company contracted to the defendant. The defendant’s
Protection Services department
was responsible for the deployment of
the security guards on the site. There are two access points at the
station. One ticket examiner
and one access controller are posted at
each access point. Two
security
guards are deployed at the northern side
and
another two at the southern side of the platform.
[12]
On
the day of the incident he was on duty from 7h00 to 16h00. His time
card for the day of the incident was handed up and marked
exhibit
“C”. He confirmed that Sibongile was on duty on the day
of the incident. He testified that another access controller,
Christo
Bulebule, and two ticket examiners, Zakes Tyali and James Mafutha
were also on duty. There were also security guards on
duty on that
day. He could not recall the names of the security guards that were
on duty.
[13] He testified that he
did not witness the incident. He did not see the plaintiff on the day
of the incident. The incident was
not reported to him by the
employees that were deployed on the site on that day. The defendant
closed its case.
Discussion
[14] The defendant
disputes that the incident occurred and therefore, the plaintiff
bears onus to prove on a balance of probabilities
that it did occur.
[15] The plaintiff was a
single witness in respect of how the incident occurred. During
his cross-examination he was asked
to explain a discrepancy between
the evidence in chief and the pleadings about where he boarded the
train in the morning of the
incident. He explained that he lives at
Lawley and he boarded the train at Grasmere because it is a closest
train station. He knows
Lenasia to be the place where the Indian
people reside. His pleadings were drafted by his lawyers. I accept
the plaintiffs evidence
given under oath that he boarded the train at
Grasmere train station in the morning of the incident.
[16] It is common cause
that the plaintiff did not report the incident to the defendant’s
employees on the day of the incident.
He was asked why he did not
report it. His explanation was that when he exited the train station
he did not see the security guards
and ticket examiners on the
platform. Had he seen them, he was going to report the incident and
ask them to call an ambulance for
him. He could not report the
incident after he was discharged from hospital because he was still
sick.
[17] Sibongile testified
that there were security guards on duty on the day of the incident,
but she could not tell if they were
present on the platform when the
plaintiff exited the station. She could not remember some of the
information because the incident
occurred a long time ago. She said
that when working at her access point she could not see people
entering or exiting at another
access point. Her evidence was not
helpful.
[18] Tsidiso conceded
under cross-examination that he could not say whether there were
security guards or not on site at the relevant
time because he
reported on duty after the incident occurred. No documentation was
produced to show that the said employees and
security guards were on
site at the relevant time. They were also not called to testify.
[19] He disputed the
plaintiff’s version that he exited the station through the
access point. He said that the plaintiff exited
at the area where the
fence was vandalized. This version was not put to the plaintiff
during his testimony by the defendant’s
counsel. He
contradicted Sibongile, who said that the only way to exit the
station was through the access point. Furthermore, in
his own version
he said that he did not see the plaintiff on the day of the incident,
and therefore he could not have seen him
exiting at the area where
the fence was vandalized. This version is a speculation and stands to
be rejected.
[20] Tsidiso said that if
the plaintiff exited the station through the access point there must
have been drops of blood on the platform
because he was bleeding from
his head. The plaintiff testified that the unknown man who assisted
him at the station covered his
head with his work overall at the
place where he fell. In my view this explains why there were no drops
of blood on the platform
where he exited. Counsel for the defendant
conceded that it is possible that the plaintiff exited the station
through the other
access point, and Sibongile did not see him. I
accept the plaintiff’s explanation for failure to report the
incident to the
defendant as being reasonable and true.
[21] The plaintiff’s
testimony about how the incident occurred was clear in all material
respects. He was corroborated by
Martin and Winnie in the report he
made to them about how he got injured, and their observations of his
injuries. He produced documentary
evidence to substantiate his
allegations, where it was relevant. The defendant could not adduce
evidence to rebut his version that
on the 13th of September 2019 he
was a passenger in train number 05, and that between Croesus and
Langlaagte train stations he
was pushed out of the moving train, he
fell and sustained injuries. It also could not rebut his evidence
that the train was overcrowded
and the doors were not closed. There
were no material contradictions and improbabilities in his evidence.
I find him to be a credible
witness. I accept his uncontested
version as true.
[22] Martin was asked to
explain the contradiction between his evidence and the plaintiff’s
evidence about who covered the
plaintiff’s head with his work
overall. Martin explained that he is the one that covered the
plaintiff's head with his work
overall. I do not find this
contradiction to be material because Martin corroborates the
plaintiff’s version about the head
injury and bleeding. Martin
did not contradict himself as a witness. There were no
improbabilities in his evidence.
[23] Winnie was a good
witness. There were no contradictions and improbabilities in her
evidence. Her evidence was clear in all
material respects and was
corroborated by the plaintiff and Martin. I accept her evidence as
true.
[24] I am satisfied that
the plaintiff has proved on the balance of probabilities that the
incident occurred.
[25] The further issue to
be determined is the liability of the defendant. It is well
established that the defendant has a public
law duty to provide
safety and security measures for its rail commuters. The plaintiff
bears onus on the balance of probabilities
to prove negligence,
wrongfulness and causation on the part of the defendant.
[26] As stated above, the
plaintiff has proved an omission on the part of the defendant that
the doors of coach no 03 were left
open while the train was in motion
and that he was pushed out of it and sustained injuries. In
Mashongwa
v Passanger Rail Agency of South Africa
2016 (3) SA 528
(CC) paras
[18], [26], 27, 48, 52 and 69,
the Constitutional
Court in determining the issues of wrongfulness, negligence and
causation stated as follows.
“
Wrongfulness
……
[18]
The
vulnerability and the precarious situation in which they often find
themselves ought, by now, to be self-evident. It is 10 years
since
Metrorail in effect highlighted the need to keep coach doors closed
to secure rail commuters and the significance of failing
to provide
safety and security measures for them when a train is in motion. Even
then it was not a new problem as there were reported
decisions in
other courts that dealt with it. This underpins the utmost importance
of Prasa’s duty ‘to ensure that
reasonable measures are
in place to provide for the safety of rail commuters’
.
……
[26]
Safeguarding the
physical well-being of passengers must be a central obligation of
Prasa. It reflects the ordinary duty resting
on public carriers and
is reinforced by the specific constitutional obligation to protect
passengers’ bodily integrity that
rests on Prasa, as an organ
of state. The norms and values derived from the Constitution demand
that a negligent breach of those
duties, even by way of omission,
should, absent a suitable non- judicial remedy, attract liability to
compensate injured persons
in damages.
[27]
When account is
taken of these factors, including the absence of effective relief for
individual commuters who are victims of violence
on Prasa’s
trains, one is driven to the conclusion that the breach of public
duty by Prasa must be transposed into a private-
law breach in
delict. Consequently, the breach would amount to wrongfulness
.
……
.
Negligence
……
.
(ii)
Open doors
……
.
[48] Doors exist not
merely to facilitate entry and exit of passengers, but also to secure
those inside from danger. Prasa appreciated
the importance of keeping
the doors of a moving train closed as a necessary safety and security
feature. This is borne out by a
provision in its operating procedures
requiring that doors be closed whenever the train is in motion.
Leaving them open is thus
an obvious and well- known potential danger
to passengers.
……
.
[52] It must be
emphasized that harm was reasonably foreseeable and Prasa had an
actionable legal duty to keep the doors closed
while the train was in
motion. Not only has it expressly imposed this duty on itself, its
importance was also alluded to in Metrorail.
It is also
commonsensical that keeping the doors of a moving train closed is an
essential safety procedure. Mr. Mashongwa would
probably not have
sustained the injuries that culminated in the amputation of his leg,
had Prasa ensured that the doors of the
coach in which he was were
closed while the train was in motion. It was thus negligent of Prasa
not to observe a basic safety-
critical practice of keeping the coach
doors closed while the train was in motion, and therefore reasonable
to impose liability
for damages on it, if other elements were proved.
……
..
Legal causation
……
..
[69] That the incident
happened inside Prasa’s moving train whose doors were left open
reinforces the legal connection between
Prasa’s failure to take
preventative measures and the amputation of Mr Mashongwa’s leg.
Prasa’s failure to keep
the doors closed while the train was in
motion is the kind of conduct that ought to attract liability. This
is so not only because
of the constitutional rights at stake but also
because Prasa has imposed the duty to secure commuters on itself
through its operating
procedures. More importantly, that preventative
step could have been carried out at no extra cost. It is inexcusable
that its passenger
had to lose his leg owing to its failure to do the
ordinary. This dereliction of duty certainly arouses the moral
indignation of
society. And this negligent conduct is closely
connected to the harm suffered by Mr Mashongwa. It is thus
reasonable, fair and
just that liability be imputed to Prasa.”
Conclusion
[27] In applying the
aforementioned Constitutional Court principles on the facts of this
case, I find that the plaintiff has proved
on the balance of
probabilities that the defendant’s omission to ensure that the
doors of a coach where the plaintiff was
were closed while the train
was in motion was negligent and wrongful. The defendant’s
negligent and wrongful conduct is closely
connected to the harm
suffered by the plaintiff. Accordingly, he should succeed on the
issue of liability.
Costs
[28] The plaintiff seeks
costs of the action. He is successful on liability. I find no reason
why the costs should not follow the
event. He also seeks the costs of
the interlocutory application compelling the defendant to have a
pre-trial conference reserved
by Siwendu J. I heard the parties on
this issue. I am inclined to award those costs on a party and party
scale.
Order
[29] In the result
the following order is made:
1.
The
defendant is liable for the plaintiff’s proven damages
resulting from the train incident that occurred on the 13
th
of September 2019.
2.
The
defendant is to pay the plaintiff’s costs for the action.
3.
The
defendant is to pay the plaintiff’s costs for the interlocutory
application reserved by Siwendu J on a party and party
scale.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela J
Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
(
Digitally
submitted by uploading on Caselines and emailing to the parties)
Date
of delivery: 4 August 2023
Appearances:
On
behalf of the plaintiff:
Adv
M Mthombeni
Instructed
by:
Jerry
Ntsedi Attorneys
On
behalf of the defendant:
Adv
F Opperman
Instructed
by:
Mngqibisa
Attorneys
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