Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 12South Africa
Louis v Road Accident Fund (23724/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 12 (10 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Louis v Road Accident Fund (23724/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 12 (10 January 2022)
Louis v Road Accident Fund (23724/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 12 (10 January 2022)
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sino date 10 January 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 23724/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
DATE:
10 January 2022
In the matter between:
LOUIS
LUUS
Plaintiff
And
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT
NICHOLS AJ
Introduction
[1] Mr Louis Luus
(plaintiff) instituted an action against the Road Accident Fund (RAF)
in which he claims damages as a result of
the injuries he sustained
in a motor vehicle accident that occurred on 22 July 2017.
[2] Although the action
was defended, the RAF was unrepresented at the hearing before me,
having cancelled the mandate of its attorneys.
[3] The issues of quantum
and liability were separated in terms of Uniform Rule 33(4) and the
plaintiff proceeded on the issue of
liability only.
The plaintiff�s
case
[4] The relevant portions
of the plaintiff�s particulars of claim aver that he was
involved in a motor vehicle collision at approximately
21h20 on 22
July 2017. The collision occurred at or near the intersection of
Swartkoppies Road and Potgieter Street, Alberton, Gauteng.
The
plaintiff was the driver of a Volkswagen Polo with registration
number: BM 58 PS GP, that was involved in the motor vehicle accident
with a Ford Bakkie with registration number: LWG 539 GP and a further
unidentified third motor vehicle, the particulars of which
and
details of the driver and / or owner are not known to the plaintiff.
[5] The driver of the
Ford Bakkie was Tichaona Chataika (Chataika). The unidentified driver
of the unidentified third vehicle caused
the motor vehicle accident
by, inter alia, entering Swartkoppies Road at high speed and thereby
forcing the plaintiff to take evasive
action that caused him to
collide with the Ford Bakkie. As a result of the collision, the
plaintiff sustained various injuries and
was forced to undergo
medical and hospital treatment at the Union Hospital and the Clinton
Hospital, both of which are in Alberton.
[6]
It is trite that the plaintiff bears the onus of proving the
negligence of the insured driver on a balance of probabilities.
[1]
[7] The plaintiff was the
only witness to lead evidence in support of his case. His evidence
was brief and cursory. He testified that
the collision occurred on
Swartkoppies Road and Potgieter Street on 22 June 2017 at
approximately 21h20. He clarified the date as
being 22 July 2017 when
led on this point by his representative, Mr Kok. He testified that he
was travelling from his home to the
hospital to pay a deposit because
his wife was expecting their baby. He was driving a grey VW Polo
motor vehicle on the right hand
side of three lanes. He was in fact
in the far right lane of these three lanes.
[8] The plaintiff
testified that he approached a robot controlled intersection and the
lights were green in his favour. He was looking
forward at the
intersection and then he tried to swerve to avoid a vehicle that just
came out of nowhere. As a result of this maneuver
his vehicle went
over the middle island and into oncoming traffic where it collided
with another car. The unidentified vehicle came
from his left and he
tried to avoid it by swerving to the right over the middle island
into oncoming traffic. He was travelling at
under 70 km/h and he was
looking forward at the time.
[9] On questioning by the
court regarding whether the unidentified vehicle forced him to
perform evasive action, his response was
that he did not know what
happened and it is a mystery to him. This unidentified vehicle just
drove off after it caused him to swerve
to the right as he did.
[10] This represented the
totality of the plaintiff�s evidence. No photos of the scene,
videos or sketch plan was presented, nor were
any corroborating
witnesses called to adduce evidence in support of the plaintiff�s
version.
[11] In view of the
dearth of evidence presented by the plaintiff, I considered the
documentation lodged by the plaintiff, with the
RAF, in support of
his claim. The Officers Accident Report form (OAR) and
the plaintiff�s statutory affidavit in
terms of s 19 of
the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (the Act) were two
of the documents that were lodged with the
RAF and again delivered to
the RAFs attorneys in July 2018 in response to a Notice in terms of
Rule 35 (14).
[12] The brief
description of the collision provided on the OAR is the following:
�
Driver A said he just saw m/v B coming in front of him
facing oncoming traffic. He tried to avoid m/v B but there were cars
on both
sides as they collided. Driver B went to hospital with slight
injuries.�
Driver B, according to this description
and the details on the OAR is the plaintiff. There is no mention of
the unidentified vehicle
that the plaintiff referred to, nor is there
any follow up counter statement provided by or from the perspective
of the plaintiff.
[13] The plaintiff
deposed to his affidavit in terms of s 19 of the Act on 2 November
2017. In it, he described the collision as follows:
�
I
was travelling along Swartkoppies Road when a motor vehicle with full
and further particulars unknown to me approached Swartkoppies
Road
from the off ramp of the R59. This unidentified motor vehicle would
have collided with my motor vehicle had I not taken evasive
action. I
swerved to the right thereby losing control of my vehicle and
ultimately colliding with a motor vehicle in the oncoming
lane in
Swartkoppies Road.�
[14] This description
makes no reference to Potgieter Street or a robot controlled
intersection. There was no mention during the plaintiff�s
evidence of the R59 off ramp. It may well be that a simple
explanation exists for these discrepancies. Conversely, there may be
no
explanation for these discrepancies. Regardless, to reconcile
these discrepancies and to try fill in the incomplete picture
presented
by the plaintiff will entail a fair amount of conjecture
and speculation. It is not the task of this court to speculate on the
manner
in which the collision occurred because of the paucity of
factual evidence adduced by plaintiff.
Evaluation and
conclusion
[15] The plaintiff�s
evidence was uncontested and he was not subject to cross-examination.
However, I have difficulty accepting the
version presented by the
plaintiff. I found it to be unsatisfactory and unreliable,
notwithstanding the discrepancies referred to
in this judgment. For
example, it seems unlikely that a person would be travelling to a
hospital at 21h20 on a Saturday night
in order to pay a deposit for
the delivery of a baby. The plaintiff�s wife could have
explained why this was of the utmost urgency
at that time on that day
or the plaintiff could have elaborated on this point. It was unclear
where this unidentified vehicle actually
appeared from and the
plaintiff testified that he approached an intersection without
considering any of his surrounds but for what
was directly ahead. It
is also not clear why no corroborating evidence was adduced to
support the plaintiff�s version.
[16]
The brief, cursory and insubstantial nature of the plaintiff�s
evidence resulted in a paucity of facts being established that
may be
used in support of the plaintiff�s duty to discharge the onus
that rests upon him regarding the negligence of the driver of
the
unidentified vehicle. A plaintiff is not relieved of this obligation
even if he is a single witness and his evidence stands
uncontradicted.
[2]
[17] On a conspectus of
the totality of the evidence and taking into account the concerns
raised in relation to this evidence, I am
not satisfied that the
plaintiff has discharged the onus of establishing his case in respect
of liability.
[18] In the premises, I
make the following order:
(a) The plaintiff�s
case is dismissed with costs.
T
NICHOLS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email, by being uploaded to CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10H00 on 10 January 2022.
HEARD
ON:
19 May 2021
JUDGEMENT
DATE: 10
January 2022
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF: Mr R Kok
rudie@leonjjvanrensburgattorneys.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Leon JJ Van Rensburg Attorneys
rudie@leonjjvanrensburgattorneys.co.za
FOR
THE DEFENDANT: Unrepresented
[1]
Arthur
v Bezuidenhout and Mieny
1962
(2) SA 566
(AD) at 576G
;
Sardi and Others v Standard and General Insurance Co Ltd
1977
(3) SA 776
(A) at 780C-H
;
Madyosi and Another v SA Eagle Insurance Co Ltd
[1990] ZASCA 65
;
1990
(3) SA 442
(AD) at 444D-F.
[2]
Minister
of Justice v Saemetso
1963
(3) SA 530
(A) at 534 G-H;
Denissova
N.O. v Heyns Helicopters (Pty) Ltd
[2003]
4 ALL SA 74
(C) para 33.
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