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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## SMS v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (9165//2017)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 55 (11 February 2022)
SMS v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (9165//2017)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 55 (11 February 2022)
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sino date 11 February 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 9165//2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
NO
DATE:
11 February 2022
S[....]
M[....]
S[....]
PLAINTIFF
And
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to Case Lines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 11 February 2022.
WEINER,
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff, S[....] M[....]
S[....], instituted action against the defendant, in her
representative capacity as the mother and natural guardian of B
S[....] (herein after referred to as “B”). The plaintiff
claimed damages for the injury caused to B when he allegedly fell
into an uncovered manhole on a pavement situated in Setlhobo
Street,
Molapo, Soweto, Gauteng.
[1]
Setlhobo Street in Molapo, Soweto is a residential area. There was a
four cornered municipal manhole on the pavement of Setlhobo
Street.
The manhole was not covered, but was surrounded by a raised concrete
barrier. B was at the time of the trial, 12 years
of age and was 7
years and 4 months of age when the incident occurred.
[3]
On 21 November 2016 at 16:00 in the
afternoon, B was playing soccer in the street with his friends,
while
heading home, four streets away. Someone kicked the soccer ball,
which was heading towards the manhole; B ran after it, tripped
and
fell into the manhole injuring his right hand on a brick. It was the
plaintiff’s case that the injury was caused by the
negligence
of the defendant, as it was obliged to maintain the pavement and
manhole and ensure that it did not create a dangerous
situation. The
defendant denied that it was negligent in the manner alleged or at
all.
Evidence
[4]
Initially, the plaintiff was to
be the sole witness in the action. When it was realised
that she was
not an eye-witness, but a witness after the fact, her counsel decided
to call B to testify. He testified that:
(a)
He was currently 12 years old and completing grade 7.
(b)
He was playing soccer on the 16th of November 2016 with his
friends, in Setlhobo street.
He was over 7 years old at the time.
(c)
At about 16h00, he and his friends were headed home. On the way they
were passing the soccer
ball between them. He saw that the ball was
headed towards the manhole. He ran to save the ball from going in;
that was when he
tripped and fell into the manhole and his hand was
injured.
(d)
He was not aware of the depth of the hole but was aware of its
existence. He however had
not played near it before.
[5]
Under cross-examination B’s
testimony contained many concessions. He testified that:
(a)
He played soccer about 4 (four) times a week on a field up the road
from where the manhole
was. He admitted that he walked past the
manhole on many occasions when he went to play soccer.
(b)
He was aware of the concrete barrier around the manhole and
that it was placed around
the manhole to caution people about the
manhole.
(c)
When he and his friends returned home after their soccer match, it
was still daylight.
(d)
When the soccer ball was heading toward the concrete barrier, he
“tripped/stumbled”
on his own feet and hit his hand on
the concrete barrier when he tried to run after the ball.
(e)
His arm then landed in the manhole and hit a brick and was injured.
[6]
The defendant did not call any
evidence, but argued that there was no negligence on its
part and
that B was the negligent party. The plaintiff argued that as B was
only 7 years old he was
doli incapax
and therefore even an
apportionment was not appropriate.
Applicable
legal principles - Negligence and causation
[7]
In
First
National Bank of Southern Africa v Duvenhage
[2]
,
the court repeated the well- known dictum
[3]
relating to negligence:
“
Of the three
elements that combine to constitute a delict founded on negligence -
a legal duty in the circumstances to conform with
the standard of the
reasonable person, conduct that falls short of that standard, and
loss consequent upon that conduct - the last
often receives the least
attention. Yet it is as essential as the others for without it there
is no delictual liability. Indeed,
in a recent illuminating note J C
Knobel suggests, on doctrinal grounds, that loss, and its causal
connection, might even be the
proper starting point for the
enquiry.”
[4]
[8]
The defendant argued that, under
cross examination, B conceded that the cause of his fall
was that he
stumbled over his feet and this caused him to fall, hitting his arm
against the concrete barrier and then on a brick
in the manhole. The
defendant thus argued that B’s injury was of his own making.
This resulted in the argument as to whether
B was
doli
incapax
at the time. Authorities were cited by both parties.
[5]
[9]
To succeed in his claim the plaintiff must,
however, first prove that the defendant was negligent
.
The fact that a minor may be
doli
incapax
and thus not accountable, does not automatically render the defendant
liable.
[6]
[10]
The defendant contended that it did not need to
rebut the presumption that B was
doli incapax
, as the
plaintiff had not discharged the onus of proving that the defendant
was negligent and that such negligence was the cause
of B’s
injury.
[11]
The defendant relied on the case
Cape
Town Municipality v Bakkerud
[7]
(‘
Bakkerud
’)where
the court held that:
“…
[I]t
would, I think, be going too far to impose a legal duty upon all
municipalities to maintain a billiard table-like surface upon
all
pavements, free of any subsidences or other irregularities which
might cause an unwary pedestrian to stumble and possibly fall.
It
will be for a plaintiff to place before the court in any given case
sufficient evidence to enable it to conclude that a legal
duty to
repair or to warn should be held to have existed. It will also be for
a plaintiff to prove that the failure to repair or
to warn was
blameworthy (attributable to culpa). It is so that some (but not all)
of the factors relevant to the first enquiry
will also be relevant to
the second enquiry (if it be reached), but that does not mean that
they must be excluded from the first
enquiry. Having to discharge the
onus of proving both the existence of the legal duty and
blameworthiness in failing to fulfil
it will, I think, go a long way
to prevent the opening of the floodgates to claims of this type of
which municipalities are so
fearful.”
[8]
[12]
The defendant submitted that the plaintiff had
failed to discharge the onus that the it had a legal duty
to repair
or to further warn pedestrians of the existence of the manhole. B was
aware of the manhole and the concrete barrier,
which he conceded was
there to warn people of the manhole; he saw the manhole; he ran
towards it to save the soccer ball from going
into the manhole; he
stumbled and injured himself. The fact that there was an uncovered
manhole was not the cause of B’s
injury.
[13]
In
Bakkerud
,
Marais JA recognised that in applying the test of what the legal
convictions of the community demand and reaching a particular
conclusion, the Courts are not laying down principles of law intended
to be generally applicable. They are making value judgments
ad
hoc.
[9]
Each case is dependent upon its own facts. There is no blanket
provision that every obstacle on a pavement must be removed.
[14]
As stated by Goosen J in
October
v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality
[10]
:
“
Significantly,
the Court in that matter [Bakkerud] did not assert a general legal
duty upon local authorities to maintain roads
and pavements, but
found that the existence of the legal duty is a matter to be
determined in the particular circumstances of the
matter. It is
therefore for the plaintiff in any particular matter to establish
both the existence of the legal duty (in this instance
to repair a
road surface or drain cover or warn of its state of disrepair) and
that the failure to do so was blameworthy in the
circumstances.”
[11]
[15]
The present case is distinguishable from some of
those relied upon by the plaintiff. In
Cutting
v The Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipalit
y
[12]
for example, the manhole was not visible and was covered with weeds
and grass - there was no warning that it existed. The plaintiff,
in
that case, was unaware of the area where the manhole was situated. In
the present case, the opposite was true.
[16]
It is worthwhile to repeat what Gorven AJA in
AN
v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape
,
[13]
stated in dealing with the principles relating to delictual
liability:
‘
It
is worth briefly sketching the legal landscape governing such a
claim. I
]n order to be liable for the loss of
someone else, the act or omission of the defendant must have been
wrongful and negligent and
have caused the loss.
Wrongfulness involves
the breach of a legal duty. The legal duty in the present matter
arose when the mother was admitted to the
hospital in labour. The
staff … had a duty to monitor the condition of mother and
foetus and act appropriately on the results.
They negligently failed
to do so, in breach of that legal duty. Their conduct was thus
wrongful. But this, in and of itself, has
never been sufficient to
found delictual liability.
The wrongful conduct must cause the
wronged person to suffer loss. The first step in proving this is to
prove that the wrongful
conduct … caused the … damage.
The appellant accordingly bore an onus to prove this. Wrongfulness
should not be conflated
with factual causation.
The test for
factual causation is whether the act or omission of the defendant has
been proved to have caused or materially contributed
to the harm
suffered. Where the defendant has negligently breached a legal
duty and the plaintiff has suffered harm, it must
still be proved
that the breach is what caused the harm suffered’
[emphasis
added]
[17]
Thus, e
ven
if the plaintiff had proved negligence/ breach of a legal duty, which
I do not believe she did, in the circumstances of this
case, I am
unable to find that the plaintiff has proved causation. Based upon
the version of B,
the
harm would nevertheless have ensued, even if the omission had not
occurred. ...’
[14]
[18]
In regard to costs, and in view of the disparate financial positions
of the parties, in my discretion,
no order for costs will be made.
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
The plaintiff’s
claim is dismissed.
___________________________
S
E WEINER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
Advocate N Ralikhuvhane
Attorney
for the plaintiff:
MN MKANSI Inc.
Counsel
for the defendant:
Advocate M Bester
Attorney
for the defendant:
RIC MARTIN Inc.
Date
of hearing:
18
January 2022
Date
of judgment:
11 February 2022
[1]
The parties agreed to separate liability and quantum. The case
concerns the issue of liability.
[2]
[2006] 4 All SA 541 (SCA).
[3]
S
ee
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A) 430E-G.
[4]
Duvenhage
at para [1].
[5]
The cited cases included
Weber
v Santam Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
1983
(1) SA 381
(A);
Eskom
Holdings Limited v Jacob Johannes Hendriks obo Jacques Justin
Hendriks
[2005]
3 All SA 415
(SCA).
[6]
Mangolele
v Road Accident Fund
(A542/2017)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 208 (13 June 2019).
[7]
2000
(3) SA 1049 (SCA).
[8]
At para [31].
[9]
At para [27].
[10]
(CA 173/2008)
[2008] ZAECHC 205
(12 December 2008).
[11]
At
para [10].
[12]
Cutting
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
(2696/01)
[2002] ZAECHC 18
(6 August 2002).
[13]
AN
v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape (585/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 102
;
[2019] 4
All SA 1
(SCA) (15 August 2019) (footnotes omitted) at paras [2]-
[4]
[14]
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
2016
(3) SA 528
(CC);
2016
(2) BCLR 204
;
[2015]
ZACC 36
para
[65].
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