Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 208South Africa
I O obo N O v The Member of the Executive Council for Health and Social Development of the Gauteng Provincial Government (35055/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 208 (4 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## I O obo N O v The Member of the Executive Council for Health and Social Development of the Gauteng Provincial Government (35055/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 208 (4 April 2022)
I O obo N O v The Member of the Executive Council for Health and Social Development of the Gauteng Provincial Government (35055/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 208 (4 April 2022)
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sino date 4 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 35055/2016
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
4 April 2022
In the matter between:
I O obo
N
O
Applicant/Plaintiff
and
THE MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL FOR HEALTH AND
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
Respondent/Defendant
(This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and uploading it
to the electronic file of
this matter on CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
2022.)
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order handed down on 16
August 2021. I
shall refer to the parties as they appear in the
trial. The plaintiff appeals on the grounds that the court
misdirected itself
in finding that the plaintiff
had
not proven its case as pleaded in the particulars of claim
and
had failed to make out a prima facie case. The defendant opposed the
application.
[2]
The plaintiff asserts that the court erred and misdirected itself on
the following
grounds:
2.1
Finding
that when considering the principles and tests applicable to
absolution from the instance, the plaintiff did not prove its
case as
pleaded in the particulars of claim;
2.2 The court
ignored paragraphs 11.4 to 11.7 of the particulars of claim and the
unchallenged evidence supporting
the allegation of prima facie
evidence of aftercare namely procedures of postnatal care breached by
the defendant:
2.2.1 the fluid balance chart
indicated troubling features of low urine output were completely
ignored;
2.2.2 the discrepancy in the
information recorded regarding key role players such as the Medical
Registrar;
2.2.3 the pulse rate and blood
pressure during pregnancy and after delivery through C-section which
was completely ignored by the
attending staff
2.2.4 the lack of evidence that Mrs.
Opperman went to high care;
2.2.5 the lack of complete recordals
of blood pressure;
2.2.6. the lack of accuracy in blood
loss assessment;
2.2.7. the lack of action taken
notwithstanding the fact that the machine not reading is mentioned in
the clinical records;
2.2.8. the lack of hospital
obstetricians referring Mrs. Opperman to a cardiologist;
2.2.9. the lack of accountability or
evidence on the administration of oxytocin and ringus lactate
according to the attending doctor’s
recommendations or
instructions;
2.2.10. the lack of adherence to
recommendations of Cronje et al, on page 506 regarding triggers to
blood pressure reading;
2.2.11. lack of evidence of the
mortality committee meeting minutes and the perinatal meeting
minutes;
2.2.12 the fact that Mrs. Opperman had
four risk factors for post-partum haemorrhage and the ineptitude
displayed in the face of
these factors by the staff of Chris Hani
Baragwanath Hospital;
2.2.13. at the recovery room, bleeding
was not checked and nothing was noted and said about uterus
contractions;
[3]
It was the applicant’s contention that the court erred in
misunderstanding the
factors in paragraph eleven of the applicant’s
particulars of claim to suggest the elements to prove the breach of
the legal
duty by the defendant, instead of the factors used to prove
the breach of legal duty. The plaintiff also contended that the court
did not understand the test for absolution. The court did not have
regard to the definition of the elements of medical negligence
and
that the defendant owed Mrs. Opperman a legal duty of care pre and
post the operation. The applicant’s case was based
on the
grounds mentioned in 2.2.1 to 2.2.13 that there was a breach of care
that resulted in the damage and the death of Mrs. Opperman.
Consequently, counsel for the plaintiff submitted that there was a
reasonable possibility that another court would come to a different
conclusion.
[4]
Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that whilst the plaintiff did not
take issue with
the caesarean section operation and the tubal
ligation, it was the post-operative care administered to Mrs.
Opperman that fell
short of what was required and was the cause of
death. She had at least four risk factors that predisposed her to
post-operative
haemorrhaging. He argued that the medical staff ought
to have taken this into account when managing her post-operative
care. He
referred to the failure to administer oxytocin within the
first twenty-four hours. He also referred to there being no action
taken
where there was an observation of low output of urine.
Furthermore, Mrs. Opperman’s pulse rate and blood pressure were
not
adequately monitored and she was not referred to the relevant
professionals for supportive treatment, namely a cardiologist and
pulmonologist. She was also not sent to the high care ward after the
operation in view of the risk factors. It was these omissions
he
argued which led to the damage which caused the plaintiff’s
wife’s death.
[5]
Counsel for the defendant submitted the evidence of the plaintiff,
the obstetric gynaecologist,
and the state pathologist was led. The
obstetric gynaecologist testified that the failure to administer
oxytocin was the only step
not taken to prevent haemorrhaging. She
was unable to comment on the causal link between haemorrhaging and
the cause of death in
Mrs. Opperman. He also submitted that no
further evidence was led that the plaintiff’s wife’s body
was incapable of
naturally producing oxytocin. Moreover, he submitted
that the gynaecologist conceded under cross-examination, that there
were other
issues that were relevant namely that Mrs. Opperman had
cardiac problems and lung problems. These were issues that needed
experts
qualified in those fields to testify on how those issues
could have contributed to the plaintiff’s wife’s demise.
The
obstetric gynaecologist was not qualified to comment on these
areas which were not within her expertise.
[6]
He argued moreover, that whilst the state pathologist found the cause
of death to
be due to a pulmonary embolism, a blood clot in the
lungs, after conducting the autopsy he found no evidence of the tubal
ligation
or caesarean section surgery playing any role in the cause
of death. This was because the sutures were intact and there was no
internal bleeding as a result of the sutures involved in the tubal
ligation and the caesarean operation. He, however, found an atonic
uterus containing a large amount of blood, after childbirth. The
uterus is meant to contract and expel all the contents such as
the
afterbirth and any blood that remains. In Mrs. Opperman’s case,
the uterus had failed to contract and was thus atonic.
[7]
Counsel for the defendant referred to the pathologist’s
evidence that he observed
a sub endocardial haemorrhage in the left
ventricular outlet which was not well understood but had high
associations with hypovolemic
shock, which is a condition when the
patient bleeds out. Mrs. Opperman also only had one lung, and the
oxygenation of the lung
would also have contributed to the inadequate
oxygenation of the blood. The pathologist also expressed the view
that the two-centimetre
increase in the ventricular heart did not
play a role in the death of Mrs. Opperman either.
[8]
The plaintiff considers that it had a low threshold to cross in
making out a
prima facie
case and that it had done so. The
plaintiff pleaded in paragraph 11 of the particulars of claim that
the defendant breached its
duty of care to Mrs. Opperman by
wrongfully, unlawfully, and negligently performing and failing to
perform obligations that it
had towards Mrs. Opperman. The caesarean
operation and tubal ligation did not appear to be an issue in the
cause of death. The
plaintiff’s case was based on the
post-operative care of Mrs. Opperman as the plaintiff alleged in
paragraphs 11.4-11.7.
and required that evidence be led to prove the
causal link between the postoperative procedures, the omissions
referred to, and
the death of the plaintiff’s wife.
[9]
The obstetric gynaecologist testified that she was not able to
testify about aspects
beyond her field of expertise. She identified
that there was no oxytocin administered. After the plaintiff’s
case was closed
the evidence was that oxytocin is produced as a
normal consequence after delivery to expel the afterbirth and
remaining blood.
No evidence was led that the plaintiff’s
wife’s body was not capable of producing oxytocin. The
pathologist found no
problem with the sutures and it appears no
problems were linked to the caesarean operation and tubal ligation.
[10] The
plaintiff alleges negligence because the plaintiff’s wife was
not referred to a pulmonologist
and a cardiologist. The plaintiff did
not lead the evidence of a cardiologist or a pulmonologist indicating
at what stage the plaintiff’s
wife was to be referred to such
experts and whether or not such experts ought to have been involved
in the operation or post the
operation to prevent her death. There
was also no causal link between the lack of urine output and the
plaintiff’s wife’s
death. Neither was there any evidence
explaining how the embolism, which the pathologist stated was the
cause of death, was linked
to the atonic uterus, if there was any
link. The pathologist’s evidence was that he found a sub
endocardial haemorrhage in
the left ventricular outlet which was not
well understood but had high associations with hypovolemic shock
linked to a patient
bleeding out. There was also no evidence linking
the lack of administration of oxytocin, which the body produced
naturally to the
cause of death.
[11] The
test in granting leave to appeal is that the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success.
The applicant’s assertion is on
the facts that the court ignored the evidence of “low hanging
fruit” which would
have persuaded another court to refuse the
application for absolution from the instance. On this basis, leave is
requested to the
Full Court of the Gauteng Division.
[12] In
view of the above, I make the following order:
1. Leave is granted to the Full Court
of the Gauteng Division with costs to be costs in the appeal.
S
C MIA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the applicant :
Adv K.K Maputla
Instructed
by
: Molema Attorneys
Masilomolema@yahoo.co.za
On
behalf of the respondent :
Adv J. Magodi
Instructed
by
: Office of the State Attorney
Kmaile@Justice.gov.za
Date
of hearing
: 24 March 2022
Date
of judgment
:
4 April 2022
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