Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 46South Africa
Zungula v Passenger Agency of South Africa (03095/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 46 (8 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 February 2022
Headnotes
between the parties on the 6th of July 2021 which was signed by both parties on the 7th of July 2021 wherein it is stated as follows: “Para 9. The plaintiff seeks the following admissions from the defendant in respect of the deficits and sequalae the plaintiff suffers from as a result of the injuries sustained in the collision:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Zungula v Passenger Agency of South Africa (03095/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 46 (8 February 2022)
Zungula v Passenger Agency of South Africa (03095/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 46 (8 February 2022)
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sino date 8 February 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 03095/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
08
FEBRUARY 2022
In
the matter between:
ZUNGULA:
SINDISWA
PLAINTIFF
And
PASSENGER
AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
Parties / their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Case Lines. The date
of the judgment is deemed to
be 8
th
of February 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
This case is about the plaintiff who sustained injuries when she fell
and landed between
the train and the platform at Horizon Station on
the 30
th
of November 2016. She sues the defendant for
damages arising out of that incident and its consequences.
[2]
The parties have agreed that the question of quantum be separated
from the issue of
liability in terms of Rule 33(4) of the Rules of
Court and be postponed for determination at a later date.
Furthermore, at the
start of the hearing the defendant moved for the
amendment to its plea to be admitted which notice of amendment was
filed on the
13
th
of January 2022, just two days before
the hearing of this matter. Initially the plaintiff chose not to file
any objection to the
amendment, instead chose to proceed with the
trial of the case. I reserved my judgment as to whether I would allow
the amendment
or not and indicated that I will deal with same in this
judgment.
[3
It is however, during argument, that counsel for the plaintiff lodged
an objection
to the proposed amendment of the defendant’s plea
and submitted that it was agreed at the pre-trial between the parties
that
the issue of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff in the
incident and its sequelae is irrelevant for the determination of
liability.
It is improper for the defendant to now coming before this
court and seek to amend its plea without affording the plaintiff an
opportunity to prepare for trial on this point. If the amendment were
to be allowed, so it was contended, the plaintiff would be
prejudiced
in the conduct of its case.
[4]
It is on record that the defendant is defending the matter and filed
its initial plea
on the 16
th
of May 2017 wherein it denied
knowledge of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff in the incident.
The defendant filed an amended
plea on the 23
rd
of July
2018 and again denied knowledge of the injuries sustained by the
plaintiff in the incident. In the proposed amendment of
the
defendant’s plea filed on the 13
th
of January 2022,
two days before the hearing of this matter, the defendant now pleads
that the injuries sustained by the plaintiff
were not directly caused
by the incident and that the alleged amputation was as a result of a
septic/infection wound whilst admitted
at the Hospital.
[5]
It is trite law that a Court may, at any stage of the proceedings
before judgment,
grant a party leave to amend any pleading or
document on such other terms as to costs or other matters as it deems
fit. Furthermore,
it has long been established that the duty of the
presiding Judge is not only that of a referee to ascertain that the
rules are
observed by the parties but also to ensure that one party
does not take advantage of the other and is to ensure that justice is
done.
[6]
It is necessary to restate what is recorded in the pre-trial minute
held between the
parties on the 6
th
of July 2021 which was
signed by both parties on the 7
th
of July 2021 wherein it
is stated as follows:
“
Para
9. The plaintiff seeks the
following admissions from the defendant in respect of
the deficits
and sequalae the plaintiff suffers from as a result of the injuries
sustained in the collision:
9.1
Does the defendant admit that the plaintiff was admitted at Leratong
Hospital for medical care and treatment
on the 30
th
of November 2016
and
discharged on the 24
th
of January 2017?
9.2
Does the defendant admit that the plaintiff sustained the following
injuries as a direct link of the
accident?
9.2.1 Fracture
of the left leg which was subsequently amputated;
9.2.2 Soft
tissue injuries;
9.2.3 Minor head
injury with neurocognitive and psychological sequelae;
9.2.4 Emotional
and psychological trauma.
Defendant is required
to give basis for which it denies the injuries having regard to the
plaintiff’s medical report and hospital
records in
confirmation:
Defendant’s
Answer:
The above is noted as
recorded in the hospital records, however, is not relevant in the
determination/ adjudication of the aspect
of merits/liability.
9.3
Does the defendant admit the diagnosed injuries are linked with the
accident in question?
Defendant’s
Answer:
The above is noted as
recorded in the hospital records, however, is not relevant in the
determination/adjudication of the aspect
of merits/liability.
9.4
Does the defendant admit that the plaintiff was treated as follows
following the accident:
9.4.1 surgical
intervention with fixatives in situ;
9.4.2
conservative treatment;
9.4.3 crutches;
9.4.4 plaster of
paris;
9.4.5 physiotherapy;
9.4.6
amputation;
9.4.7
debridement;
9.4.8
psychological counselling.
Defendant’s
Answer:
The above is noted as
recorded in the hospital records, however, is not relevant in the
determination/adjudication of the aspect
of merits/liability.
[7]
Although the Court has the power to grant a party leave to amend its
pleadings at
any stage of the proceedings before judgment is
delivered, the Court must exercise its discretion judicially and will
only do so
if there is no substantial prejudice that would be meted
to the other party. In casu, the parties agreed in the pre-trial
minute
that issues relating to the injuries of the plaintiff are
irrelevant in the determination of the merits or liability. It is
therefore
disconcerting for the defendant to resile from that
agreement only two days before the trial. The timing of filing the
notice of
amendment two days before trial deprived the plaintiff the
opportunity to prepare and to lead evidence on that particular issue
in the trial.
[8]
It should be remembered that the privity and sanctity of the contract
should prevail
at all times. It has been decided in a number of cases
that the courts should not easily allow parties not to respect and
honour
the terms of their agreement unless it is demonstrated that
certain terms of the agreement are prejudicial to one of the parties.
Put differently, courts have been enjoyed to hold parties to the
terms of their agreement unless such terms of the agreement are
against public policy.
[9]
In
Mohabed’s Leisure Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sun Hotel
Interests (Pty) Ltd (183/17)
[2017] ZASCA 176
(1 December 2017)
the
Supreme Court of Appeal reaffirmed the principle of the privity and
sanctity of the contract and stated the following:
“
paragraph
23 The privity and sanctity of contract entails that contractual
obligations must be honoured when the parties have entered
into the
contractual agreement freely and voluntarily. The notion of the
privity and sanctity of contracts goes hand in hand with
the freedom
to contract, taking into considerations the requirements of a valid
contract, freedom to contract denotes that parties
are free to enter
into contracts and decide on the terms of the contract.
”
[10]
The Court continued and quoted with approval a paragraph in
Wells
v South African Alumenite Company
1927 AD 69
at 73
wherein the
Court held as follows:
“
If
there is one thing which, more than another, public policy requires,
it is that men of full age and competent understanding shall
have the
utmost liberty of contracting, and that their contracts, when entered
into freely and voluntarily, shall be held sacred
and enforced by the
courts of justice.”
[11]
Recently the Constitutional Court in
Beadica 231 and Others v
Trustees for the Time Being of Oregon Trust and Others CCT 109/19
[2020] ZACC 13
also had an opportunity to emphasized the
principle of pacta sunt servanda and stated the following:
“
paragraph
84
Moreover,
contractual relations are the bedrock of economic activity and our
economic development is dependent, to a large extent,
on the
willingness of parties to enter into contractual relationships. If
parties are confident that contracts that they enter
into will be
upheld, then they will be incentivised to contract with other parties
for their mutual gain. Without this confidence,
the very motivation
for social coordination is diminished. It is indeed crucial to
economic development that individuals should
be able to trust that
all contracting parties will be bound by obligations willingly
assumed.
Paragraph
85 The fulfilment of many of the rights promises made by our
Constitution depends on sound and continued economic development
of
our country. Certainty in contractual relations fosters a fertile
environment for the advancement of constitutional rights.
The
protection of the sanctity of contracts is thus essential to the
achievement of the constitutional vision of our society. Indeed,
our
constitutional project will be imperilled if courts denude the
principle of pacta sunt servanda.”
[12]
I am of the respectful view therefore that the proposed amendment
should not be allowed since there
was an agreement between the
parties that the issues relating to the injuries of the plaintiff
will only be relevant in the determination
of the quantum of the
damages. To allow the amendment against what was agreed upon by the
parties will be prejudicial to the plaintiff
since it deprives her
the opportunity to deal with the issues in the present trial. Even if
there was no such agreement concluded
at the pre-trial, the plaintiff
stands to be prejudiced by the proposed amendment for its claim
against the hospital might have
become proscribed. The defendant had
ample opportunity to bring the amendment and has done so twice
already without raising the
issues of the injuries. It is patently
clear that the defendant is taking advantage of the plaintiff and
that should not be countenanced.
The irresistible conclusion is
therefore that the notice of the proposed amendment falls to be
dismissed.
[13]
The genesis of this case arises from the 30
th
of November
2016 when the plaintiff and her group, after finishing writing their
last examination paper rushed to the Horizon Station
to board a train
to Stretford. As testified by the plaintiff, she arrived at the
Horizon Station with her friends and decided to
celebrate the writing
of their final examination by buying three litres of red wine. They
were about sixteen or seventeen in number
though not all of them were
drinking. She put her sling-bag on the floor and went to the bathroom
with about five of her friends
as they prepared to board the train
that was about to arrive at the time. As she was dressing herself up
in the bathroom, her other
friends warned them that the train was
coming and as she came out of the bathroom the train was entering the
platform.
[14]
She waited behind the groups on the platform for her turn to board
the train as she was last
in line. She testified further that the
platform at Horizon Station was lower than the train. As she put her
foot on the train
and the other foot was hanging in the air, the
train jerked and started to move forward causing her to lose her
balance and she
fell between the train and the platform. Her left leg
was injured in the process and she was taken to Leratong Hospital
where she
was hospitalised and received treatment for a period of two
months. She observed that the train or coach she was entering did not
have any hand rails at the door – hence she could not hold on
to anything when she lost her balance. Furthermore, there was
no
security or train marshals and or guards posted at the station nor
did she hear any verbal or oral warning nor even a whistle
was blown
to warn passengers that train is about to depart from the platform or
station.
[15]
She recalls having been pulled out from where she landed between the
train and the platform by
her friends Tshepo and Fats and was placed
on the grass on the platform whilst awaiting medical assistance. She
did not recall
talking to anyone at the time as she was experiencing
severe pains on her foot. At the time she was boarding the train, it
was
stationary and its doors were open. She attempted to board the
coach immediately behind that of the drivers and she had a ticket
going to Stretfort although she resides in Orlando East in Soweto.
This is so because she went to Stretfort the previous day and
slept
there at a friend’s house as they were preparing for the
examination. The coach she attempted to was not full of passengers
at
the time. She had consumed alcohol with her friends at the station
but she was not drunk when the incident happened.
[16]
Mr Tshepo Eugene Khapule
(“Khapule”)
is the
witness for the plaintiff who testified that he was in the company of
the plaintiff at the Horizon Station on the day of
the incident and
was the one who retrieve the plaintiff from where she landed between
the train and the platform when she fell.
The train was stationary
and its doors were open when the plaintiff attempted to board the
train. Her one foot was inside the train
and the other floating in
the air when the train shook and pulled away causing her to lose her
balance and fell between the train
and the platform. They banged the
body of the coach and shouted for the driver to stop and when it
stopped he went down to where
the plaintiff landed as she fell and
pulled her to the platform. He could clearly see the plaintiff
boarding the train from where
he was standing inside the coach.
[17]
He contributed to the buying of the three litres of wine and
participated in consuming the alcohol
but it was not much and they
were not drunk. When he saw the train approaching, he and the other
friends warned the people who
were at the bathroom of the coming
train and the plaintiff came out as the last group from the bathroom.
She was the last to board
the train and it shook as she was boarding
causing her to lose her balance and fell. The doors of the train were
open when it arrived
and were still open when it left Horizon
Station. He did not hear any verbal or oral warning nor any blowing
of the whistle to
warn passengers that the train was about to depart
the station. It shook and pulled away for about one to four meters
and stopped
before the head coach left the platform as they shouted
for the driver to stop.
[18]
The defendant called Mr Russell Faasen Tritchard
(“Tritchard”)
who is its Protection Official to testify. He received a complaint at
Horizon Station on the day and attended there to find the
plaintiff
who was injured on her left leg. He spoke to the friend of the
plaintiff who informed him of what had happened. He then
called the
ambulance and Mr Norman Wayne Laedeman, from the investigating team
of the defendant. On his arrival, Mr Laedeman took
over the scene and
he left to attend to other things. He did not take a statement from
the friend or the plaintiff but only made
notes for himself of what
he was told by the friend.
[19]
Mr Laedeman
(“Laedeman”)
testified that he was
called to the scene of the incident on the day in question and noted
a statement from a friend of the plaintiff.
He further noted
statements from the train guard and the train driver. He does not
know how the accident happened.
[20]
Mr Lebohang Bongani Tlholole
(“Tlholole”)
is the
train driver who testified that he reduced speed as he approached
Horizon Station and stopped at the platform without incident
on the
day in question. He waited for the signal from the train guard that
it was safe for the train to leave the station and when
he received
the signal as a single bell chime, he released the handbrake of his
train and started moving. The train moved for between
six and ten
meters and he immediately brought it to a stop as he received the
three bell chime from the train guard which signalled
for him to stop
the train.
[21]
As a precaution, he waited in his cabin for some time for another
signal from the train guard
before he disembarked from his leading
coach to investigate what was happening. He saw the security guards
and other people surrounding
an injured person and when he approached
the security guards stopped him. He did not witness how the incident
occurred since from
where he is seated in his cabin he is unable to
see the surroundings of the train. His train did not jerk or shake
before leaving
since the platform at Horizon Station has an incline
or downward gradient – allowing the train to roll forward when
its brakes
are released.
[22]
According to Ms Julia Mapule Mocumi
(“Mocumi”)
who
was the train guard on the day in question, she pressed the lever to
open the doors when the train stopped at Horizon Station
to allow
passengers to disembark and those on the platform to embark the
train. She does not know if all the doors were closed
or open when
the train reached the platform. As the train guard she occupiers the
rear or last coach of the train. Her duties entail
the opening of the
doors when the train stops at the platform and after ascertaining
that all is safe, to close the doors and signal
to the driver that it
was safe to depart from the platform. She signals to the driver to
depart by pressing the bell which gives
a single chime and if there
are problems, she would press the bell to signal with three chimes to
the driver to stop the train.
[23]
After the train had stopped, she witnessed and observed the plaintiff
disembarking the train
from the front coaches and started running
towards the gates of the ticket examiners. She was moving in zig-zag
fashion. She blew
her whistle twice to signal that the train is about
to depart and eventually pressed the lever to close the doors and
signalled
to the driver that it was safe to depart the station. When
the train started moving, she observed the plaintiff starting to run
alongside the train towards the end of the platform and at the point
when the plaintiff attempted to reach for the doors of the
train, she
pressed the three chime bell to signal to the driver to stop the
train. When she saw the plaintiff running alongside
the train towards
the end of the platform and as she was behind the yellow line, she
thought she is one of those people who are
avoiding the ticket
examiners.
[24]
She testified further that the train did not jerk when it departed
the but it smoothly pulled
away from the platform. She did not know
what caused the plaintiff to fall between the train and the platform.
She alighted from
her cabin and went to investigate and found the
plaintiff lying on the grass surrounded by other passengers with her
foot covered
with handkerchiefs where it was injured. She then
reported the matter to her office. She made a statement to the
investigators
of the defendant about eight months after the incident.
[25]
It is trite that for the plaintiff to succeed in the cases that
involves negligence, it must
prove that there was a duty of care owed
to it by the defendant which the defendant has breached and that the
breach has caused
harm to occur which resulted in damages.
[26]
In
Kruger v Coetzee 1966 (2) SA (A) 430
the Supreme Court of
Appeal stated the following:
a)
“
a
diligens paterfamilias in the position of the defendant –
(i)
Would foresee
the reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring another in his
person or property and causing him patrimonial loss;
and
(ii)
Would take
reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence; and
b)
The defendant
failed to take such steps.
[27]
In
Le Roux and Others v Dey [2011] (3) ZACC SA 274 (CC)
the
Constitutional Court stated the following at para 122:
“
In
the more recent past our courts have come to recognise, however, that
in the context of the law of delict: (a) the criterion
of
wrongfulness ultimately depends on a judicial determination of
whether – assuming all the other elements of delictual
liability to present – it would be reasonable to impose
liability on a defendant for the damages flowing from specific
conduct;
and (b) that the judicial determination of that
reasonableness would in turn depend on considerations of public and
legal policy
in accordance with constitutional norms. Incidentally,
to avoid confusion it should be borne in mind that, what is meant by
reasonableness
in the context of wrongfulness has nothing to do with
the reasonableness of the defendant’s conduct, but it concerns
the
reasonableness of imposing liability on the defendant for the
harm resulting from that conduct.”
[28]
In
Country Cloud Trading cc v MEC Department of Infrastructure
Development
[2014] ZACC 28
;
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC)
the Constitutional
Court sated the following:
“
Wrongfulness
is an element of delictual liability. It functions to determine
whether the infliction of culpably caused harm demands
the imposition
of liability or, conversely, whether ‘the social, economic and
other costs are just too high to justify the
use of the law of delict
for the resolution of the particular issue’. Wrongfulness
typically acts as a brake on liability,
particularly in areas of the
law of delict where it is undesirable and overly burdensome to impose
liability.”
[29]
The central issue in this case is whether the defendant, through its
employees, is to blame for
the incident which caused the plaintiff
serious injuries to her left leg. It is undisputed that the plaintiff
was involved in the
incident which caused her to suffer injuries on
the day in question. What is in dispute is whether the defendant,
through its employees
was negligent which negligence caused the
plaintiff to fall between the platform and the train causing her to
suffer the said injuries.
The crux of the dispute is whether the
plaintiff attempted to board a moving train or the train was
stationary when she started
boarding it but it then started moving
before she could put her whole body inside the train causing her to
lose balance and fall
between the train and the platform.
[30]
It is well established that in civil cases the onus is on the
plaintiff to prove its case on
a balance of probabilities and where
there are factual disputes, in resolving those factual disputes the
Court will employ the
technique which was summarised as follows in
Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery Group Limited and Another v
Martell & Cie SA and Others
2003 (1) SA 11
(SCA):
“
Paragraph
5 On the central issue, as to what the parties actually decided,
there are two irreconcilable versions. So too on a number
of
peripheral areas of dispute which may have a bearing on the
probabilities. The technique generally employed by court in resolving
factual disputes of this nature may conveniently be summarised as
follows. To come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court
must
make findings on (a) the credibility of various factual witnesses;
(b) their reliability; and (c) the probabilities. As to
(a), the
court’s finding on the credibility of a particular witness will
depend on its impression about the veracity of the
witness. That in
turn will depend on a variety of subsidiary factors, not necessarily
in order of importance, such as (i) the witnesses’
candour and
demeanour in the witness-box; (ii) his bias, latent and blatant;
(iii) internal contradictions in his evidence; (iv)
external
contradictions with what was pleaded or put on his behalf, or with
established fact or with his own extracurial statements
or actions;
(v) the probability or improbability of particular aspects of his
version; (vi) the calibre and cogency of his performance
compared to
that of other witnesses testifying about the same incident or events.
As to (b), a witness’s reliability will
depend, apart from the
factors mentioned under (a)(ii), (iv) and (v) above, on (i) the
opportunities he had to experience or observe
the event in question
and (ii) the quality, integrity and independence of his recall
thereof. As to (c), this necessitates an analysis
and evaluation of
the probability or improbability of each party’s version on
each of the disputed issues. In the light of
its assessment of (a),
(b) and (c) the court will then, as a final step, determine whether
the party burdened with the onus of
proof has succeeded in
discharging it. The hard case, which will doubtless be the rare one,
occurs when a court’s credibility
findings compel it in one
direction and its evaluation of the general probabilities in another.
The more convincing the former,
the less convincing will be the
latter. But when all factors are equipoised probabilities prevail.”
[31]
The defendant’s case is that the plaintiff attempted to board a
moving train and thereby
placed herself in danger of sustaining an
injury. In other words, by attempting to board a moving train the
plaintiff voluntarily
assumed the risk of sustaining an injury or
causing harm to herself. The relevant and factual witnesses for the
defendant on this
point are the train driver and the train guard.
[32]
The defendant criticised the evidence of the plaintiff in that she
disclosed that she had consumed
alcohol before the incident occurred
only when she was under cross examination. This criticism, as
contended by the defendant,
creates doubt as to the credibility of
the evidence of the plaintiff. Furthermore, it was contended that by
consuming alcohol before
boarding a train the plaintiff voluntarily
assumed the risk of injuring herself in the process and the situation
became worse when
she attempted to board a moving train.
[33]
It is undisputed that the plaintiff had consumed alcohol at the
station before the incident occurred.
However, as I understood her
evidence and that of Khapule, they organise and bought three litres
of wine which was shared amongst
the sixteen to seventeen
individuals. Although it is not clear exactly what quantity was
consumed by the plaintiff, it was urged
upon the court to take
cognisance of the undisputed evidence that her breath smelled of
alcohol even five hours after the incident
when she was preparing for
theatre at the hospital.
[34]
I find myself in disagreement with the plaintiff. I cannot consider
the issue of the plaintiff
disclosing that she consumed alcohol only
under cross examination in isolation. It has been established in a
number of decisions
that the court should consider the testimony of
the plaintiff and all other evidence before it to make a credibility
finding. The
fact that she did not voluntarily disclose that she had
consumed alcohol before the incident when she was giving evidence in
chief
does not mean that I should discard her testimony as an untruth
of what happened on the day. In my view, the plaintiff gave a
detailed
account of the incident in a clear, unambiguous and
satisfactory manner.
[35]
I am unable to disagree with the plaintiff that she was not drunk
when the incident happened.
She testified that she was aware of what
was happening around her at the time – hence she was able to
give a full account
of the incident. I do not intend to venture on
speculation as to whether the plaintiff was drunk and or whether the
alcohol consumption
by the plaintiff contributed to the incident
occurring. There is no evidence before me that the plaintiff was
drunk at the time
of the incident. Mocumi testified that she saw a
lady on the platform who she could not tell whether she was running
or walking
but later mentioned that this lady was walking in a
zig-zag fashion. I am of the respectful view that this is
insufficient to make
a finding as to whether the plaintiff, if that
is the person Mocumi is talking about, was drunk at the time nor to
find that the
drunkenness of the plaintiff contributed to the
occurrence of this incident.
[36]
Undoubtedly Khapule’s testimony in as far as being with the
plaintiff from the college
to the point when he and other fellow
students or passengers called for the people who had gone to the
bathroom that the train
was coming corroborates that of the
plaintiff. However, Khapule had difficulties in explaining his
position in the coach at which
the plaintiff was injured when she
attempted to embark the train. His testimony also corroborates that
of the plaintiff in that
there were no hand rails at the door
entering the coach – hence she could not hang onto something as
she lost her balance
when the train jerked or started moving. Khapule
placed himself in different positions in the coach and it is clear
that his evidence
cannot be relied upon in determining how the
plaintiff got injured. But regard being had to the fact that it was
him and one Fats
who immediately jumped to rescue the plaintiff, it
is undisputable that he saw the plaintiff fell and acted as he did.
[37]
Khapule’s testimony stands uncontroverted when he testified
that the train doors were wide
open when it arrived at the station
and that they remained open when people disembarked and embarked and
even when the train departed
the doors were still wide open. Mocumi
testified that she only presses the lever to close and open the doors
but she does not know
if the doors were closed or open when the train
departed the platform. The plaintiff’s version is that she
embarked a stationary
train and the doors were open at the time. This
is in line with Mocumi’s testimony that she opened the doors
when the train
arrived and stopped at the platform.
[38]
Nothing turns in the argument that the train never jerked and or
shook that day before departing
because of the way the rail line is
laid out at Horison Station. It is my considered view that both
phenomena of shaking or jerking
are indicative that the train moved
at that particular moment. Considering the uncontroverted testimony
of the plaintiff that there
were no hand rails at the door of the
train at the time which testimony was corroborated by Khapule who
went to the extent of saying
that the train was vandalised, jerking
and or shaking signifies movement of the train which caught the
plaintiff by surprise as
she was embarking the train with one foot on
the train and the other floating in the air. Thus, the plaintiff lost
her footing
or balance and could not hold onto any hand rail to save
herself and landed between the platform and the train in the process
sustaining
serious injury to her left leg.
[39]
Tlholole was calm when he gave his evidence and was clear and to the
point. In a nutshell his evidence
was that the train did not jerk or
shake when it departed the platform since the rail line is in the
incline gradient or downward
slope at Horison Station. However, he
did not see the incident and could not dispute that the plaintiff
lost her balance and fell
between the train and platform when she was
boarding the train which then started to departed the platform. From
his position as
the driver he is unable to see what is going on
around his train – he relies on the guard who signals for him
that it was
clear and safe, and if the robot signal in front of him
signals that the passage in front is also clear, he then proceeds to
depart
the platform.
[40]
Mocumi, whose duties as a train guard was to ascertain that the
platform is safe before signalling
to the driver to depart, was all
over the place when she initially testified. She testified that she
saw a woman on the platform
but she was not sure whether this woman
was running or walking. Later on she testified that she observed the
plaintiff disembark
from the train but cannot account when exactly
the plaintiff boarded the train. If she was keeping a proper lookout
as her duties
required her to do, she should have seen the plaintiff
boarding the train. However, the uncontroverted evidence is that,
after
writing her final examination paper the plaintiff came from
college with her student friends to board the train at Horison
Station.
They waited for the train from around 12H30 until after
14H00 when the train arrived. She never embarked and disembarked from
the
train at any stage. The only time she attempted to embark on the
train is when this incident occurred.
[41]
Mocumi’s testimony that she saw the plaintiff disembark from
the front coaches and ran
towards the entrance gate manned by the
ticket examiners and when the train started moving, she turned around
and started running
alongside the train towards the end of the
platform appears to be her own fabrication. The undisputed evidence
is that the plaintiff
had a train ticket when the incident occurred
and therefore she had no reason to run to the entrance gate manned by
the ticket
examiners and thereafter turn around and run towards the
end of the platform ‘like the people who run away from the
ticket
examiners’ as testified by Mocumi.
[42]
Mocumi testified that the bathrooms on the platform were near to her
coach when the train stopped
and next to it would have been the
entrance gate manned by the ticket examiners. The undisputed evidence
is that the plaintiff
went to the bathroom earlier before the train
arrived at the station and she came out of the toilet when the train
was arriving
at the platform. Mocumi now wants the Court to believe
that she saw the plaintiff run to the train from the direction of the
bathrooms
which are situate next to the gate of the ticket examiners.
It seems to me this is another fabrication by Mocumi to make as
though
she was keeping a proper look as her duties demand and she saw
the plaintiff. If I were to accept this version, it boggles the mind
as to why Mocumi signalled that it was safe and clear for the train
to depart when there was this lady on the platform who was
behaving
in a strange way.
[43]
On the other hand, if Mocumi had already issued the signal for the
train to depart, it is worrisome
why she did not signal for the train
to stop when she saw this lady turning around and starting to run
alongside the train. The
other problem I have with her testimony on
this aspect is that Tlholole and Khapule testified that the train did
not move for a
long distance. Khapule testified that it moved for
about one to four meters and stopped and Tlholole said about six but
not more
than ten meters. According to Mocumi the plaintiff turned
from the gate and started running after the train which was already
in
motion. If the train stopped within six meters from its point of
departure, Mocumi’s version is improbable for the train would
have stopped before the plaintiff reached it. Plaintiff would not
have had to run alongside the train considering that the distance
between the entrance gate and the train is estimated at thirty meters
by Mocumi.
[44]
If Mocumi’s duties are to protect and promote the safety of the
passengers and should only
signal for the train to depart the
platform if it is safe to do so, it boggles the mind why she would
signal for the train to depart
when there is this lady on the
platform who is walking in a zig-zag fashion and running towards the
entrance gate manned by ticket
examiners and suddenly changes her
course and start to run alongside the train. Mocumi testified that
what drew her attention to
this lady was because she was behaving in
a strange way. Given the strange behaviour of the plaintiff at the
time, Mocumi should
have signalled for the train to stop immediately
she saw this lady changing her direction and beginning to run first
towards the
train and then alongside it. Mocumi should not have
waited for the plaintiff to attempt to reach for the doors of the
train before
she signalled for the train to stop.
[45]
I understand the common thread in the cases quoted above as that the
test to be applied in these
circumstances is that of a reasonable
person in the position Mocumi as the train guard. Assuming that the
version of Mocumi is
correct, the test would then be would a
reasonable train guard in the position of Mocumi have signalled for
the train to depart
when there was a person on the platform who
behave in a strange manner. Given the circumstances prevailing at the
platform at the
time, a reasonable train guard would not have
signalled for the train to depart because she would have foreseen
that this lady
might attempt to board the train when it starts moving
which may result in her being injured or harmed.
[46]
It shall be recalled that the evidence of Mocumi is that she was
concerned with the behaviour
of this lady on the platform. Assuming
that she had signalled for the train to depart the platform whilst
this lady was running
towards the entrance gate as contended and the
train started moving, Mocumi, as a reasonable train guard should have
foreseen the
danger of harm being caused immediately the lady changed
her course and started running towards the train. She should have
signalled
for the train to stop at that point before the lady started
running alongside the train and attempting to reach for its doors.
[47]
In the more recent past in
Mashongwa v Prasa (CCT03/15)
[2015]
ZACC 36
;
2016 (2) BCLR 204
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 528
(CC) (26 November
2015)
the Constitutional Court stated the following when it was
dealing with the issue of wrongfulness:
“
Para
19 What then is this case about? It concerns physical harm suffered
by a passenger when attacked and later thrown off a moving
train as
well at the sufficiency of the safety and security measures employed
by PRASA. And the question is whether PRASA’s
conduct was
wrongful. Khampepe J pointed out in Country Cloud that:
‘
Wrongfulness
is generally uncontentious in cases of positive conduct that harms
the person or property of another. Conduct of this
kind is prima
facie wrongful’.
In my view, that
principle remains true whether one is dealing with positive conduct,
such as an assault or the negligent driving
of a motor vehicle, or
negative conduct where there is a pre-existing duty, such as the
failure to provide safety equipment in
a factory or to protect a
vulnerable person from harm. It is also applicable here.
[48]
The Court continued to state the following in paragraph 20:
“
Public
carriers like PRASA have always been regarded as owing a legal duty
to their passengers to protect them from suffering physical
harm
while making use of their transport services. That is true of taxi
operators, bus services and the railways, as attested to
by numerous
cases in our courts. That duty arises, in the case of PRASA, from the
existence of the relationship between carrier
and passenger, usually,
but not always, based on a contract. It also stems from its public
law obligations. This merely strengthens
the contention that a breach
of those duties is wrongful in the delictual sense and could attract
liability for damages”.
[49]
There is no merit in the defendant’s contention that the train
guards are experiencing
these situations every day and if they were
always to ascertain what people were doing at the platform, the
trains would otherwise
never depart on time or at all. It has been
decided in a number of cases that the defendant owes a duty to
protect and transport
its passengers in a safe manner. Put
differently, there is a pre-existing duty on the defendant to safely
transport its passengers.
It is therefore not open to the defendant
to place the issues of time above the safety of its passengers. The
ineluctable conclusion
is therefore that Mocumi failed to execute her
duties and her conduct was wrongful and resulted in causing harm to
the plaintiff.
[50]
In my view, there is merit in the criticism levelled against the
defendant that there were no
train marshals and or security guards on
the platform on the day in question. The presence of the train
marshals and or security
guards at the platform would have ameliorate
the difficulties and challenges faced by the train guard in ensuring
the safety of
the passenger before signalling for the train to
depart. The marshals and or guards would have been in a better
position to deal
with this lady who was behaving in a strange manner
and stop her from attempting to board a moving train as contended by
the defendant.
The failure to provide such a safety measure by the
defendant is wrongful and resulted in the plaintiff suffering harm in
her person.
[51]
It is my respectful view therefore that the irresistible conclusion
is that the defendant’s
conduct was wrongful in not providing
the train marshals and or guards at the station. Furthermore, the
conduct of the defendant
was wrongful in that the train had no hand
rails at the door and in that the train guard delayed to stop the
train when by the
exercise of reasonable care and deligence, she
should have foreseen the danger of the plaintiff causing harm to
herself when she
turned around and started running alongside the
train and should have immediately signalled for the train to stop. I
therefore
conclude that the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty of
care and has breached that duty which breach has caused harm to the
plaintiff
as a result whereof it suffered damages.
[52]
The plaintiff sought an order from this court for the costs of two
counsel in this case. The
plaintiff’s contention is that this
case has been in and out of the court for a considerable time now due
to its complexity.
I do not agree. This is an ordinary claim for
damages against one of the State entities. There is nothing complex
about the matter
which required the attention of two counsel of
almost the same level in practice. Moreover, it has been decided in a
number of
judgments that the plaintiff must also minimise its damages
and the costs related thereto. I am not persuaded by the plaintiff’s
submission that the matter has been in and out of the court since no
evidence was proffered as to what caused the matter to be
handled in
that manner nor why should the defendant be mulct with the costs
thereof.
[53]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The proposed amendment
of the defendant’s plea is refused;
2.
The issue of the
quantum of damages is separated from the merits of this case in terms
of Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court;
3.
The defendant is liable
to pay 100% of the plaintiff’s proven damages;
4.
The defendant shall pay
the party and party costs of the plaintiff including the costs of one
counsel.
______________
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
17 – 21 January
2022
Date
of Judgment:
8
th
February 2022
For
the Plaintiff:
Advocate F. Matika
Advocate S. Tshungu
Instructed
by:
Z &
Z Ngogodo Attorneys Inc
Tel: 011 028 1258
Chepape@ngoiawjhb.co.za
For
the Defendant:
Advocate B.D. Molojoa
Instructed
by:
Jerry
Nkeli & Associates
Tel: 011 838 7280
khuliso@jerrynkelilaw.co.za
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