Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1377South Africa
Skhosana v Road Accident Fund (58501/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1377 (27 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary of physical residual problems
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Skhosana v Road Accident Fund (58501/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1377 (27 November 2023)
Skhosana v Road Accident Fund (58501/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1377 (27 November 2023)
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sino date 27 November 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 58501/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
Date:
27 November 2023
Signature
In
the matter between:
SKHOSANA,
THANDEKA
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed
down by circulation to the parties' legal representatives by email,
and uploaded on the CaseLines electronic
platform. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 27 November 2023.
HITCHINGS AJ:
Introduction
1.
The plaintiff is Thandeka Skhosana, a major
female who was born on 26 January 1997.
2.
The plaintiff sought default judgment against the
Road Accident Fund for compensation for injuries which she claimed to
have sustained
in a motor vehicle collision which occurred on 23
September 2018. The matter appeared before me as a default
judgment because
the defendant had, following service on it of a
notice of bar, failed to file a plea and was accordingly barred from
filing a plea.
3.
The plaintiff was represented by Adv I Nwakodo
and the defendant was represented by State Attorney Ms N Moyo.
Application for the
Upliftment of Bar
4.
At the commencement of the hearing Ms Moyo
applied from the bar for the upliftment of the bar because the
defendant wished to file
a plea. She added that if the bar were
to be uplifted, the defendant would apply for the postponement of the
application
for default judgment.
5.
Ms Moyo indicated that if I were to uplift the
bar, the defendant would file a plea to the effect that the plaintiff
had failed
to comply with section section 24(1)(a) and (4) of the Act
of the Road Accident Fund Act
56
of 1996
(“the Act”), read with
The Management Directive issued on 8 March 2021 and The Supplier
Communication issued on 19 May
2021. (Both Directives were
subsequently published in the Government Gazette in a Board Notice
issued on 4 June 2021).
The defendant would therefore plead
that plaintiff was accordingly not entitled compensation.
6.
I pointed out to Ms Moyo that in the recent full
bench matter of
Mautla and
Others v Road Accident Fund and Others
((29459/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1843 (6
November 2023)) Regulation 7 and the said directives had been
reviewed and set aside.
Her response was a
proverbial shrug of the shoulders accompanied by a statement that
despite the judgment, it remained her instructions
to argue that
regulation 7 and the relevant notices still had to be complied with.
She argued that since the plaintiff had
not, despite the defendant’s
written objection, properly complied with these prescripts, the
plaintiff had been non-suited.
7.
In a short
ex tempore
judgment, I refused the application for the upliftment of the bar.
The principal reasons were that no explanation had been
proffered by
the defendant for its failure to have pleaded within the period
contemplated in the notice of bar, no explanation
had been tendered
as to why the application for the upliftment of the bar had been
brought so late, and the fact that the proposed
plea would in any
event not disclose a defence.
Application for
Default judgment
8.
At the commencement of his address in the
application for default judgment, Mr Nkwakodo informed me that the
plaintiff would be
pursuing a claim for only future loss of earnings
which would be some R1,5 million (even though the particulars of
claim reflect
an amount of only R1 million).
9.
Mr Nkwakodo applied for the matter to be heard on
affidavit in terms of Uniform Rule 38 (2). Ms Moyo indicated
that the defendant
did not oppose the application and I accordingly
granted it.
10.
All evidence was accordingly adduced by way of
affidavit. As I will point out hereunder, this evidence was
largely contradictory.
It is important to note that the
plaintiff deposed to an affidavit confirming the correctness of the
facts recorded by the respective
experts in so far as such facts
referred to her – thereby confirming the contradictory
evidence.
11.
The orthopaedic surgeon, Dr Kumbirai’s
affidavit which had ostensibly been filed for the purpose of
confirming the contents
of his 21 July 2021 report did not state that
he had examined the plaintiff, but rather that he had examined
himself. Thus
Dr Kumbirai’s report was not confirmed
under oath. I nevertheless, and in favour of the plaintiff, had
regard to Dr
Kumbirai’s report.
The Collision
12.
In her affidavit in terms of section 19(f)(i) of
the Act deposed to on 30 March 2021, the plaintiff stated that the
vehicle in which
she had been travelling had collided with a vehicle
approaching from the front in its wrong lane. Her description
was that
the other vehicle “…
was
driving on (sic) the oncoming traffic lane
”.
This accords with the version pleaded in the particulars of claim.
13.
The plaintiff’s version of the collision as
recorded in her section 19 (f) (i) affidavit and in her particulars
of claim differs
irreconcilably from the version which she gave to
the experts who examined her.
14.
According to the report of the orthopaedic
surgeon, Dr Kumbirai, dated 21 July 2021, the plaintiff had described
the collision as
having been caused when the vehicle in which she had
been a passenger “
was T-boned by another
car at a robot
”. This is also the
version recorded by Dr Kumbirai in the RAF 4 serious injury
assessment report.
15.
According to Mr Modipa, the clinical psychologist
who examined the plaintiff on 20 July 2021, the plaintiff
“…
recalled
their vehicle was hit on the left side by another vehicle that failed
to stop at the traffic intersection. She sustained
injuries to the
right arm.
”
16.
The report of an industrial psychologist, Mr
Kalanko, reflects that:
“
The claimant
was reportedly a passenger when the accident occurred. She noted that
the car she was in collided with another car
at an intersection.”
The
injuries
17.
The plaintiff testified in her section 19 (f) (i)
affidavit, that she had suffered a “broken hand”.
No mention
was made of any back or elbow injuries.
18.
As reported by Dr Kumbirai in his report, after
the collision the plaintiff had been transported to Zola Clinic.
On examination,
it appeared that she had suffered a soft tissue
injury to her right elbow. The x-ray examinations showed that
she had not
suffered any fractures. There was no mention of a
“broken hand”. There was also no mention of any
back
injuries. A backslab was applied to her right elbow and
she was discharged on the same day. The backslab was removed
after 3 weeks. The plaintiff received pain management.
19.
The report of an industrial psychologist, Mr
Kalanko, reflects that according to the plaintiff, she had sustained
the following
injuries during the collision:
19.1.
Right hand injury
19.2.
Right arm injury
The plaintiff’s
employment
20.
According to the particulars of claim, the
plaintiff had, on the date of the collision, been employed as a “cook
and/or chef”.
21.
Dr Kumbirai reported that the plaintiff had been
unemployed at the date of the accident.
22.
Mr Kalanko, the industrial psychologist, reported
that at the time of the collision, the plaintiff had been employed as
a “domestic
worker” and “cook/cleaner”.
23.
Mr Modipa, the clinical psychologist, reported
that at the time of the collision, the plaintiff had been employed as
“a cook”.
The Sequelae of the
Injuries
24.
As far as the sequelae of the plaintiff’s
injuries were concerned, Dr Kumbirai reported that the plaintiff had
sustained a
soft tissue damage to her right elbow. He observed:
24.1.
“
No deformity noted”;
24.2.
“
Full range of motion - no pain”;
24.3.
“
Neurovascularly intact”;
24.4.
“
X-rays of the right elbow done by Drs
Mkhabele and Indunah Diagnostic Radiologists on 19 July 2021 were
normal”; and
24.5.
“
the injuries have resulted in
Non-serious long-term impairment/loss of body function.”
25.
Mr Kalanko, the industrial psychologist, reported
the following:
25.1.
She suffers from back pains;
25.2.
She has recurring headaches;
25.3.
She has concentration difficulties;
25.4.
She cannot lift heavy objects with her right
arm;
25.5.
She suffers from pains on her right arm
especially during cold weather; and
25.6.
The complaints noted by the claimant may have
a negative effect on her ability to work in the open labour market.
26.
The
sequelae
referred to by the industrial psychologist, Mr Kalanko, and
particularly the back pains, headaches and difficulties in
concentrating,
do not appear to be logically connected to the soft
tissue injury to the plaintiff’s elbow. This much was
candidly
conceded by Mr Nwakodo.
27.
Ms Mathebula, an occupational therapist who
examined the plaintiff on 20 July 2021 gave the following summary:
Summary of physical
residual problems
She presented with
physical residual limitations attributed to the injury sustained as a
result of the accident in discussion that
includes pain reported on
the lower back with thoraco-lumbar spine movements, pain reported
with right shoulder and elbow movements,
reduced sitting, standing
and walking endurance with reports of painful lower back, grade 4
muscle strength of the right shoulder
and elbow with reports of pain,
reduced right dominant hand grip strength, reduced right upper limb
endurance, reduced dynamic
balance due to painful lower back and she
experiences occasional headaches, painful lower back and right elbow.
28.
As is the case with the report of the industrial
psychologist, Mr Kalanko, it will be readily observed that the
“
physical residual problems
”
reported by Ms Mathebula include issues which, on the face of it,
common sense would dictate are not ordinarily associated
with a soft
tissue injury of an elbow.
29.
The orthopaedic surgeon did not refer to any
further injuries which could have been caused by the soft tissue
elbow injury.
And, particularly, he did not refer to any of the
back-associated limitations referred to by Ms Mathebula.
30.
Mr Nwakodo, correctly in my view, conceded that
no link between the elbow injury and the back-associated limitations
in particular
had been demonstrated.
Inability to Work
31.
Ms Mathebula, the occupational therapist, opined
that the plaintiff’s occupation as a cook (if one accepts that
she had been
employed at the time of the collision) fell into the
range of light to low medium physically demanding duties. She
found,
on testing, that the plaintiff had
“…
completed
the task
[which was light to low medium
physically demanding]
at 91% which is above
the minimal requirements of 87.5% in the light physically demanding
duties in open labour market
.”
32.
The plaintiff was accordingly physically able to
continue her employment as a cook.
33.
Ms Mathebula’s subsequent suggestion that
the plaintiff would only be employable with “reasonable
accommodation”
is based on what she termed the “
physical
residual problems”.
As already
pointed out above, these limitations were not demonstrated to have
been causally connected to the soft tissue elbow injury
reported by
Dr Kumbirai.
Quantum: Actuarial
Report
34.
The actuary, Mr Oketch, furnished his report on
the basis that the plaintiff had been employed as a domestic worker
as reported
by the industrial psychologist. The plaintiff’s
case as pleaded was that she had been employed as a “cook
and/or
chef”. Her section 19 (f) (i) affidavit is silent
on the issue of her employment.
35.
The actuarial report was also based on the
information provided by the industrial psychologist whose opinion
relied upon frailties
which were not proven to have been causally
related to the plaintiff’s injury sustained in the collision.
36.
I am mindful of the fact that a court is not
bound to apply actuarial calculations in determining an appropriate
award for loss
of earning capacity, but may instead make a globular
award which it deems fair and reasonable (
Southern
Insurance Association Ltd v Bailey NO
1984
(1) SA 98
(A)
113 F to114E).
Conclusions
37.
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Road
Accident Fund v Busuku
(2023 (4) SA 507
(SCA)
at para [6]) recently restated
the principle that
“
. . .it must be
recognised that the Act constitutes social legislation and its
primary concern is to give the greatest possible
protection to
persons who have suffered loss through negligence or through unlawful
acts on the part of the driver or owner of
a motor vehicle.”
and
“
. . . the
provisions of the Act must be interpreted as extensively as possible
in favour of third parties in order to afford them
the widest
possible protection.”
38.
This principle does not however mean that that a
court must disregard the applicable legal rules relating to the proof
of liability
and the quantum of damages.
39.
I was not furnished with any evidence to explain
the conflicting versions as reflected, on the one hand, in the
particulars of claim
and the plaintiff’s section 19 (f) (i)
affidavit, and on the other hand, the version which the plaintiff
gave to the orthopaedic
surgeon and the occupational therapist.
Thus, I am of the view that, given the unexplained conflicting
versions of how the
collision occurred, the plaintiff has failed to
discharge the onus of proving that the defendant is liable for any
proven damages.
40.
Even if the plaintiff had proven that the
defendant was liable for her proven damages, no evidence was led to
demonstrate a causal
connection between the soft tissue injury to the
plaintiff’s right elbow and the plaintiff’s back pain,
headaches and
depression. Quite simply, the plaintiff failed to
prove that the soft tissue elbow injury resulted in her being
permanently
unemployable in the open labour market. So too, no
evidence was led to persuade me that the elbow injury resulted in the
plaintiff suffering a future loss of earning capacity.
41.
In the circumstances, the plaintiff’s
application for default judgment should be dismissed.
42.
I can see no reason why the usual rule relating
to costs should not apply.
43.
I accordingly make the following order:
The applicant’s
application for default judgment is dismissed with costs.
HITCHINGS
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
local division, Johannesburg
Date
of Judgment:
27
November 2023
Plaintiff’s
Legal Practitioner:
Adv I
Nwakodo
Instructed
by:
Anyiam
Attorneys Inc
Defendant’s
Legal Practitioner:
Attorney
Ms N Moyo
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
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