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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 275
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## Ngubane v Road Accident Fund (2020/20008)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 275;
2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ) (26 April 2022)
Ngubane v Road Accident Fund (2020/20008)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 275;
2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ) (26 April 2022)
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sino date 26 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO : 2020/20008
REPORTABLE
:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES :
YES
REVISED:
YES
26
April 2022
In
the matter between:
SIMPHIWE
BONGAYIPHI NGUBANE
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
Summary:
In terms of the
common law, a general damages claim is not transmitted to a deceased
estate if the deceased passes way prior to
litis contestatio being
reached. The majority decision in the Nkala-judgment developed the
common law in a blanket fashion whilst
the minority in Nkala declined
a blanket development of the common law. The development of the
common law as per the majority in
Nkala has not found universal
acceptance in our law and divergent approaches remain. After a review
of the authorities on the development
of the common law and having
regard to foreign jurisdiction developments in this field of law, the
measured and cautionary approach
as per the minority in Nkala is
preferable above the majority’s blanket approach. No proper
binding development of the common
law in relation to general
transmissibility of general damages claims have taken place and the
existing Supreme Court of Appeal
authorities on transmissibility of
general damages claims remain binding. This judgment does not affect
the class action in Nkala.
JUDGMENT
Thompson
AJ:
[1]
“
The
law is a jealous mistress and requires long and constant courtship.
It is not to be won by trifling favors, but by lavish homage
.”
[1]
Half-minded
attention to, even the most minute aspects of law, is spurned by this
jealous mistress that is law. She requires constant
hard work, effort
and dedication towards it.
[2]
She requires attention, at all times, to a wide spectrum of aspects,
even if those aspects are not always immediately clear. The
failure
to pay adequate attention, to what would seem even the most trifling
of aspects in the most simplest of cases can very
easily lead to the
demise of a case. This matter is a sterling example of the aforesaid.
[2]
On the face
it, this matter is a simple default judgment application on a claim
for
general
damages
arising out of a motor vehicle collision that occurred on 27 February
2019, with action having been instituted on 11 August 2020
and the
summons being served on 14 August 2020. It did not remain simple. The
Plaintiff passed away on 25 February 2021 and was
lawfully
substituted as plaintiff with the executor of his estate. Through all
of this, the Defendant never entered an appearance
to defend.
[3]
As a result of
the Defendant never having entered the fray, pleadings never closed
and
litis
contestatio
was
never reached. When the matter was called before me, Counsel
appearing for the Executor deemed the matter to be a simple one
that
should take no longer than an hour. Unfortunately, Counsel did not
afford the law, on all issues that may arise in this matter,
long and
constant courtship. I enquired from Counsel whether the Plaintiff’s
claim for general damages have in fact transferred
onto his deceased
estate, to be pursued by the Executor in the circumstances of this
case. Counsel could not provide me with an
answer. As a matter of
fact, Counsel candidly confirmed that had not considered the point.
The matter was stood down that counsel
may consider the issue and
make submissions on the point.
[4]
Prior to
returning to the contentious issue in this matter, it is apposite
that I first deal with the preliminary matters relating
to the
application for default judgment.
PROCEDURAL
ASPECTS
[5]
The
collision occurred on 27 February 2019. The RAF1 form
[3]
was served on the Johannesburg Office of the Road Accident Fund on 9
May 2019. The summons was issued on 11 August 2020 and served
on 14
August 2020. The particulars of claim contains an averment that the
provision of Section 24 of the RAF had been complied
with prior to
the institution of the action and I am satisfied that the
pre-litigation formalities have been complied with.
[6]
The return of
service indicates that the summons and particulars of claim was
served upon a Mr Bojabotseha, an admin officer ostensibly
a
responsible employee and not less than 16 years of age, of and in
control of and at the principal place of business of the Defendant.
As a return constitutes
prima
facie
proof of the contents therein contained, I am satisfied that lawful
service of the summons took place.
[7]
No defence was
ever entered by the Defendant. Even after the application for default
judgment was served on the Defendant by the
Sheriff on 27 July 2021,
no response was elicited from the Defendant. Not even the notice of
set down pertaining to the application
for default judgment, served
on the Defendant on 8 September 2021, spurred the Defendant into
action. I am satisfied that the Defendant
has knowledge of the action
as well as the application for default judgment.
[8]
After a draft
of this judgment had already been prepared by me on the basis that
this matter is proceeding as a default judgment
matter, my registrar
received an email from the Plaintiff’s attorney that this
matter had, all of a sudden, become settled.
The Plaintiff’s
attorney opined that as the matter had become settled, the matter
should be removed from the roll and dealt
with on the settlement
roll. This stance was adopted in light of item 35 of the Judge
President’s Consolidated Directive
(18 September 2020
Consolidated Directive) In Re: Court operations in the Pretoria and
Johannesburg High Courts during the extended
COVID-19 National State
of Disaster (“the JP’s Directive”), which provides
that “
Matters
that are enrolled on the Trial roll and which become settled should
be removed from the trial roll. These matters should
be set down on
the Settlement Roll and shall be dealt with in the identical fashion
to the Judicial Case Management Meetings/Case
Management Conferences
under the conditions described above.
”
[9]
In my view the
reliance by the Plaintiff’s attorney on item 35 of the JP’s
Directive is ill-founded for two reasons.
Firstly, item 35 refers to
the matter being on the trial roll and settling. It does not refer to
an instance where the matter had
already been allocated to a judge
for hearing and the judge has taken evidence. Secondly, in my view
the sudden settlement is no
more than an attempt to remove the matter
from my scrutiny and the vexed question posed whether the general
damages claim transferred
to the deceased’s estate. Accordingly
I refused to have the matter removed to the settlement roll.
[10]
This second
aspect was confirmed when counsel, when moving the settlement before
me, was taken aback that I again raised the transferring
of general
damages to the deceased estate as an issue with him. He was of the
incorrect view that it is no longer an issue as the
matter had
settled.
[11]
I afforded
counsel an opportunity to make submissions on the aforesaid issue and
he still could not do so. I extended to counsel
the opportunity to
submit written heads of argument and, due to the impending festive
holiday period, afforded him until 14 January
2022 to file the heads
of argument. Shortly before 14 January 2022, counsel informed my
registrar that he will not be able to file
the heads of argument by
14 January 2022 and requested more time. More time was afforded to
Counsel, however as at the date of
this judgment I have not been
favoured with the additional heads of argument. As judgments cannot
lag indefinitely at the behest
of counsel, I have now elected to
finalise this judgment without the benefit of additional submissions
by counsel.
[12]
As an aside,
and without casting any aspersion on any of the practitioners
involved, I am concerned as to the circumstances relating
to the
sudden settlement having regard to the Defendant’s indifferent
attitude to this matter until after a default hearing
was conducted.
I am further concerned about the lack of persistence with seeking
final judgment by furnishing the necessary additional
heads of
argument. In my view, it would be prudent for the powers-that-be
within the office of the Defendant to investigate the
circumstances
surrounding the sudden settlement of the matter. It may be ‘
much
ado ‘bout nothing’
,
yet I would be remiss in my duties as a judicial officer to not bring
these concerns to the attention of the upper echelons of
the
Defendant.
THE
MERITS
[13]
The merits of
the matter is relatively simple in nature. The Plaintiff, being a
pedestrian, was crossing the intersection of Koma
Road and Masingafi
Street, Soweto. There was a stop sign controlling traffic and street
lights were working on both sides of the
road. The Plaintiff made an
observation to check if there was any oncoming traffic and, as there
was an absence of oncoming traffic
he proceeded to cross the road.
Whilst crossing the road and by the time the Plaintiff had reached
the middle of the road, a silver
VW Polo came charging, at a high
speed, from a steep hill and collided with the Plaintiff despite the
Plaintiff attempting to run
out of the approaching vehicle’s
path. The Plaintiff was seriously injured as a result of the
collision.
[14]
I
take cognisance of the fact that both the neurologist‘s and the
clinical psychologist’s reports indicate that the
Plaintiff
suffer from memory loss, poor average delayed memory and poor
immediate verbal memory. The mere fact that evidence is
uncontradicted does not mean that I, as judicial officer, must
believe and/or accept the evidence tendered by the Plaintiff.
[4]
Uncontradicted evidence does not necessarily amount to satisfying the
burden on proof that rests upon the Plaintiff.
[5]
Had I only been faced with the Plaintiff’s evidence, the merits
of the matter may have been the death-knell for the Executor.
[15]
However,
the Plaintiff’s version is, in material respects, confirmed by
his brother who is a witness to the accident.
[6]
Counsel for the Executor submits that the brother is an independent
witness. I differ on this score. The Plaintiff’s brother,
being
a possible heir in the Plaintiff’s deceased estate, has a
vested interest in the claim. He can thus not be considered
to be a
wholly independent witness. That being said, the Plaintiff’s
claim was instituted long before his death. It is not
a claim
instituted by the deceased’s brother after the death of the
deceased and which may be a construed as a self-serving
or enriching
action. Moreover, from the Accident Report form it is evident that
the Plaintiff was indeed struck by a motor vehicle.
[16]
In light of
the uncontradicted evidence as a whole on behalf of the Plaintiff, I
cannot find that there arises any facts that causes
me to, on a
balance of probabilities, disbelieve and not accept the Plaintiff’s
version. I am, on the evidence that is before
me, satisfied that the
Defendant is 100% liable for the damages that may be proved.
THE
CONTENTIOUS ISSUE – DOES THE CLAIM FOR GENERAL DAMAGES TRANSFER
TO THE PLAINTIFF’S DECEASED’S ESTATE.
[17]
In
terms of the common law, a claim for general damages only transfers
to a deceased estate if
litis
contestatio
had been reached. The authorities in this regard is legion and well
known.
[7]
[18]
Litis
contestatio
is,
in modern practice, synonymous with the close of pleadings as
envisaged by Rule 29
[8]
of the
Uniform Rules of Court.
[9]
As
the Defendant has never entered the fray and did not deliver a plea,
the pleadings could not close and
litis
contestatio
could
not be reached.
[19]
The
position under the common law is no different. According to Voet,
litis
contestatio
in
Roman times were achieved when there was a “
joinder
of issue
.
. .
enclosed
in judicial proceedings
.”
It meant no more than “
the
plaintiff’s statement of claim along with the defendant’s
contradiction or rebuttal
.”
[10]
Voet describes
litis
contenstatio
in modern times as “the practice of
the
Romans has also been approved in the customs of present day, so that
a judicial proceeding is said to be truly constituted by
the joinder
of issue, and cannot exist without it.”
[11]
[20]
Voet
does, however, touch upon another subject which may have been of
assistance to the Executor. Voet decribes what is termed “
fictitious
”
joinder of issue, which arises when “
a
defendant, being summoned to law and cited by three edicts, refuses
in contumacy to appear.”
[12]
I could find no authority whereby this Roman-Dutch principle was
infused into the common law. That being said, there seems to be
no
logic that one principle relating to
litis
contestatio
being
infused to the common law with the exclusion of the other. This is,
however, not an issue I need to finally pronounce upon
due to the
fact that even if it was infused with the common law it would not
assist the Executor. On the most liberal of interpretations,
litis
contestatio
would
occur when the application for default judgment is launched. The
application for default judgment is dated 26 July 2021, well
after
the Plaintiff’s death.
[21]
In
a recent judgment,
[13]
my
brother Mavundla J stated that it is trite “
that
a
claim for general damages does not pass to the estate of a deceased
person unless
litis
contestatio
has
taken place
”
.
Had this been the only recent authoritative view on the point,
following a long line of appeal court authority, this would have
been
the end of the road for the Executor. But
alas
,
this is not the only recent authoritative pronouncement on the issue
of transferability of a general damages claim, prior to
litis
contestatio,
to a deceased’s estate.
[22]
In
Nkala
and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others,
[14]
the parties who sought certification of a class action also
challenged the common law principle against transferability of a
general
damages claim prior to
litis
contestatio
having been reached. This challenge was limited to the class action
sought to be certified.
[15]
The majority judgment, per Mojapelo DJP and Vally J, found that the
common law should be developed as a whole
[16]
in respect of all claimants and defendants across the entire spectrum
of general damages, irrespective of whether the cause of
action arose
from the class action sought to be certified, a Road Accident Fund
claim, a medical negligence claim or any other
claim in respect of
which a general damages claim could be sustained. The majority had
regard to the principle that the development
of the common law should
take place incrementally, but found that an incremental development
of common law will have unjustified
discriminatory consequences. The
minority, per Windell J, agreed with the majority that the common law
should be developed, but
was of the opinion that the development
should happen incrementally and be limited to the class action before
it.
[23]
Although
the Constitution enjoins the High Court to, in appropriate
circumstances, to develop the common law, this right accorded
to the
High Courts does not constitute a licence to change the law as the
High Court may deem fit. Where a constitutional challenge
is made
against a common law principle, the High Court is obliged to, first,
consider whether the existing common law requires
development in
order to accord with the objectives of the Bill of Rights.
[17]
It is here that the party challenging the common law on
constitutional grounds must identify the constitutional rights that
the
party avers is being infringed upon and prove the nature of the
infringement. The infringement must not be justifiable in an open
and
democratic society.
[18]
It is
only when the High Court is convinced that common law principle is in
conflict with a provision in the Bill of Rights that
the High Court
is obliged to depart from the common law.
[19]
[24]
However,
the aforesaid envisaged conflict must be a direct conflict with the
provisions of the Bill of Rights.
[20]
If there is no direct conflict with a provision of the Bill of
Rights, even if the High Court deems the common law in need of
development, the High Court is bound by the principle of
stare
decisis
and must follow the existing appeal court authorities on the point.
[25]
I
pause to mention that I do not deal with second exception identified
in the
Afrox
-judgment,
namely where the High Court is entitled to develop the common law
where the previous appeal court authorities were based
on the
boni
mores
of society.
[21]
I can find,
save for a passing remark relating to
boni
mores
in
comparative jurisdictions,
[22]
no indication that the development of the common law was affected in
terms of the second exception. As a matter of fact, the challenge
by
the persons who sought the certification of the class action and the
development of the common law was based squarely on a challenge
in
respect of specific provisions contained in the Bill of Rights.
[26]
I have
difficulty in accepting that the challenge in the
Nkala
-matter,
from a general approach, constituted a direct challenge as envisaged
by
Afrox
.
In my view, the challenge to freedom of security of the person and
the right to bodily integrity is a personal right. A claim
for
general damages, it is claim
in
personam,
even
where the constitutional right of freedom of security of the person
and the right to bodily integrity comes into play. In relation
to the
general approach of the development of the common law on the
transferability of a general damages claim to a deceased estate,
it
is not the person who has directly suffered the harm to bodily
integrity that is pursuing the claim. It is an executor, on behalf
of
a deceased estate in respect of potential heirs who have no automatic
right to inherit, that is pursuing the claim. At best,
the challenge
in respect of bodily integrity and freedom of security of the person
– in respect of the general approach to
the development of the
common law – is an indirect challenge as it does not pertain to
a harm suffered by the person who
directly suffered the general
damages harm.
[27]
The
next issue, in my view, is the contention that the common law
unjustifiably takes away the right of the person who can claim
general damages, upon his death prior to
litis
contestatio
,
to ensure that the beneficiaries of such deceased person’s
estate receive the benefit of the compensation that he, the deceased
person, would have been entitled to.
[23]
My difficulty in this regard is that “
n
o
one has a fundamental right to inherit and a potential beneficiary
who is nominated in a will has no more than a spes or
hope
of inheriting
.”
[24]
General damages falling into a deceased estate will not summarily be
paid to heirs. The estate’s debts, if any, must first
be
settled. Only then, if there is a residue available for distribution,
will the heirs receive an inheritance.
[28]
The
general reliance on the best interests of a child is also not without
controversy. It assumes, generally, the involvement of
minor children
as potential heirs across the board.
[25]
In this matter the Plaintiff did not have any children and this
consideration does not come into play. Moreover, it presupposes
a
right to inherit by a child, which right to inherit I have already
demonstrated does not exist, and leaves out of consideration
the
principle of freedom of testation whereby the person entitled to
general damages disinherits children beneficiaries.
[29]
The
equality argument
[26]
is, in
my view, also not without controversy in a general application. As
previously indicated, the right to claim general damages
is a claim
in
personam
.
To put it more bluntly, it is a claim to provide solace to a person
for pain, suffering, disfigurement, loss of amenities of life
and the
like which that person had suffered. The reason why the general
damages claim is transferred to an estate on the death
of the
deceased after
litis
contestatio
had
taken place
,
generally
speaking, is because the deceased had taken timeous steps to
prosecute such a claim. There is, in my view, nothing arbitrary
in a
claimant diligently prosecuting a claim and causing his estate to be
vested with a general damages claim due to diligent prosecution
of
the claim.
[30]
In this matter
the Plaintiff was entitled to make application for default judgment
as early as 31 August 2020. The application for
default judgment was
served almost 11 months later. The failure by the Plaintiff to
diligently prosecute his claim for general
damages cannot be said, in
my view, to create inequality
vis-à-vis
a plaintiff who has diligently prosecuted a claim and had the
resultant deceased estate vested with a general damages claim.
[31]
Moreover, why
draw the line on arbitrariness in respect of plaintiffs who had
instituted action for general damages. What about
a person who was
unlawfully arrested and unlawfully detained for a number of days.
Such person, undoubtedly, has a general damages
claim. On his way to
an attorney, in order to instruct the attorney to institute a general
damages claim, he suffers an unrelated
heart attack and passes away.
Why should his estate be denied the general damages claim merely
because, due to no fault of his
own, he was denied the opportunity to
institute a claim.
[32]
Following on
from the aforesaid, an executor would not be precluded from
instituting action to recover general damages even; where
the person
who could have claimed general damages had no subjective intention to
do so. If the
in
personam
claim is transmissible to a deceased estate, there should then be no
objection to an executor being able to pursue a general damages
claim
to enrich a deceased estate for the benefit of heirs.
[33]
The
answer to the aforesaid questions may lie in the old authorities of
Justinian
and
Voet
.
[27]
Due to the conclusion I reach, there is no need for me to delve into
these aspects. However, the questions serve to demonstrate
that the
arbitrary-differentiation-argument has the potential of opening
Pandora’s
box,.
Taken to its most absurd conclusion, an executor will be vested with
a claim in favour of an estate where no such claim was
ever intended
by the person who actually suffered the general damages.
[34]
The
concern raised in the
Nkala
-judgment
pertaining to the continual shifting of
litis
contestatio
by
way of an amendment to pleadings is more apparent than real, in my
view. Not every amendment to pleadings will have the effect
of
re-opening the pleadings.
[28]
In my view the potential harsh effects of a re-opening of pleadings
and the shifting of
litis
contestatio
can be addressed on a case-to-case basis.
[35]
Windell
J, in
Nkala
,
makes reference to the existence of legislation in foreign
jurisdictions such as the United States, the United Kingdom and
Australia
[29]
in her
dissenting judgment. I have had the opportunity to peruse some of the
foreign legislation.
[30]
What
is clear from these pieces of foreign legislation is that a blanket
right is not created for the transmissibility of general
damages to a
deceased estate. In Australia, exemplary (punitive) damages are
specifically excluded from transmitting to the deceased’s
estate. Furthermore, damages for pain and suffering are excluded
unless it falls under a specific statutory provision allowing
such a
claim to be transmitted to a deceased estate, as created in terms of
the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions (Asbestos
Diseases) Act
2002. In Scotland, the 1976 version of the Damages Act expressly
excluded damages for
solatium
or for any patrimonial loss attributable after the deceased’s
death. The 1993 version of the Damages Act partially removed
the
prohibition on the transferring of
solatium
damages, by allowing such a claim to be calculated immediately prior
to the deceased’s death. The 2011 version of the Damages
Act
allowed for the inclusion of non-patrimonial damages as well as
defamatory damages and damages relating to injuries actionable
under
the Protection from Harassment Act 1997. It is thus clear that the
exclusionary provisions have been revised by the Legislature
in
Scotland as it deemed it necessary. It was not left in the hands of
the courts to determine how the common law should be adjusted
and/or
changed to meet society’s demands.
[36]
The
transmission of general damages to a deceased’s estate is thus
not the proverbial free-for-all in foreign jurisdictions.
It is a
curtailed and conservative approach to the extension of the common
law, no doubt based on empirical research as to the
necessity and
extent of the scope thereof being relied upon by the respective
legislatures. In my view, the reasoning by Windell
J in her
dissenting judgment as to the curtailed and conservative approach to
the development of the common law must be accepted
above the views of
the majority in
Nkala
.
I therefore express my agreement with the views expressed by Windell
J in her dissenting judgment on a general development of
the common
law relating to transmissibility of actions for general damages
before
litis
contestatio.
[37]
In
my view, a development of the common law on the transmissibility of
general damages prior to
litis
contestatio
having
been reached as per the
Nkala
majority judgment
,
goes
beyond the permissible realms of judicial development of the common
law and causes the judiciary to impermissibly infringe
upon the
realms of the legislature. As former Deputy Judge President of the
SCA, LTC Harms, once stated “[t]
he
common law consists of a miriad rules developed over many centuries
involving great minds. It represents a fine web, the disturbance
of
which at one point may have severe unexpected consequences elsewhere.
The new era makes extraordinary demands on judicial officers.
The
ubiquitous Constitution sets the boundaries – boundaries
neither of barbed wire, nor made of rubber. Free judicial discretion
is not a value of the Constitution, nor is legal uncertainty. The
Constitution illuminates the legal landscape, but it is not blinding;
it does not provide a trench from which the common law may be
attacked, but it entrenches rights. Sections 39(2) and 173 of the
Constitution do not place a machete in the hands of the judge to
decapitate or to castrate, but it provides modeling clay out of
which
art must be created capable of withstanding the heat of the
oven.
”
[31]
[38]
The
views expressed by LTC Harms has been echoed in the constitutional
jurisprudence developed by the Constitutional Court. Caution
is
required and the effects of a proposed development of the common law
must be considered.
[32]
I
could find nothing in the
Nkala
majority
judgment that caution was applied in respect of a blanket development
of the common law nor, and even more importantly,
that any evidence
was presented and/or considered as to the wider consequences of the
change
Nkala
purported to effect to that area of law. The minority judgment by
Windell was more cautious and called for the wider consequences
to be
considered.
[39]
Having regard
to various policy considerations which must be addressed in
consideration of the wider consequences it is my view
that, as much
as there may have been need to develop the common law relating to
transmissibility of actions for general damages
in respect of class
actions, the same considerations do not necessarily apply to a
development of the common law generally in this
regard. The views
expressed by the majority in
Nkala
falls more
within the third category as set out in
Afrox
.
To find otherwise would leave me in hand with a machete, to
decapitate the common law based on what would amount to the
idiosyncratic
views of a single judge. In the premises I view myself
as not being bound to follow the majority in
Nkala
but rather to follow the generally accepted common law position as
pronounced upon by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[40]
It thus
follows that the Executor’s claim on general damages must be
dismissed. It is therefore not necessary for me to deal
with the
quantification of the general damages claim.
[41]
I pause here
to mention that nothing in this judgment must be construed to impact
on the class action specific declaration of transmissibility
of a
general damages claim as set out in paragraph 8 of the order in the
Nkala
-judgment.
This judgment must only be construed in the context of a general
development of the common law on transmissibility of
a general
damages claim.
[42]
In the
premises, I make the following order:
1.
The Defendant
is liable for 100% of the proven damages in respect of the injuries
sustained by the Deceased.
2.
The
Plaintiff’s claim for general damages, being the only head of
damages, is dismissed.
3.
No order as to
costs.
4.
The Registrar
is directed to bring this judgment to the attention of the Chief
Executive Officer of the Defendant, in particular
paragraphs [8] to
[12].
CHARLES
E. THOMPSON
Acting
Judge of the Gauteng Local
Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff :
B Molojoa
Instructed
by Khumalo T. Attorneys
For
the Defendant :
No appearance
Date
of hearing :
11 &
24 November 2021
Date
of judgment :
26 April 2022
[1]
Statement
made in 1929 by United States Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story
[2]
Sanaskriti
Rastogi, Amity Law School Noida ALL INDIA LAW FORUM
Law
is a Jealous Mistress
16 May 2020
https://allindialegalforum.in/2020/05/16/law-is-a-jealous-mistress/
[3]
Section
24(1)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (“the RAF
Act”) as read with Regulation 7(1) of the Regulations
published in terms of the RAF Act under GN R770 in GG 31249 of 21
July 2008 (as amended)
[4]
Katz
v Bloomfield and Keith
1914
TPD 379
at 381
[5]
McDonald
v Young
2012
(3) SA 1
(SCA) at para [6], quoting with approval
Siffman
v Kriel
1909 TS 538
“
It
is settled that uncontradicted evidence is not necessarily
acceptable or sufficient to discharge an onus
.”
[6]
The
Accident Report form describes a wholly different picture. However,
in the absence of evidence gainsaying the version of the
Plaintiff,
I am bound by the admissible evidence presented. It must be noted
that the insured driver is identified and the Defendant,
if it
defended the action, could easily have submitted a gainsaying
version. Had the Defendant done so, the outcome on the merits
may
have been wholly different.
[7]
Jankowiak
v Parity Insurance Co Ltd
1963 (2) SA 286
(W);
Milne
N.O. v Shield Insurance Co. Ltd
1969 (3) SA 352
(AD);
Potgieter
v Rondalia Assuracne Corporation of SA Ltd
1970 (1) SA 705 (N)
[8]
“
Pleadings
are considered closed if —
(1)
(a) either party has
joined issue without alleging any new matter, and without adding any
further
pleading;
(b)
the last day allowed for filing a replication or subsequent
pleading has elapsed and it
has not been filed;
(c)
the parties agree in writing that the pleadings are closed and such
agreement is filed with
the registrar; or
(d)
the parties are unable to agree as to the close of pleadings, and
the court upon the application
of a party declares them closed.
(2) (a)
Upon allocation of a date or dates for trial, the registrar must
inform all parties
of the allocated dates.
(b)
The party which applied for the trial date must, within 10 days of
notification from the registrar,
deliver a notice informing all
other parties of the date or dates on which the matter is set down
for trial.”
[9]
See
Milne
N.O.
,
supra
at 358C;
Government
of RSA v Ngubane
1972
(2) SA 601
(AD) at 608D – E;
Potgieter
v Sustain (Edms) Bpk
1990 (2) SA 15
(T) at 18H – 19H;
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para [14];
KS
v MS
2016 (1) SA 64
(KZD) at 69C – D
[10]
The
Selective Voet being the Commentary on the Pandects
translated
by Percival Gane
2
p 158 – 9
[11]
Voet
,
supra
at 159
[12]
Ibid
[13]
Mahlangu
N.O. obo Mahlangu v RAF
(67880/14)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 7 (15 January 2020)
[14]
2016
(5) SA 240
(GJ)
[15]
See
para [233]
[16]
See
para [217]
[17]
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2001] ZACC 22
;
2001
(4) SA 938
(CC) at para
[40]
[18]
S
v Manamela and Another (Director-General of Justice Intervening)
[2000] ZACC 5
;
2000
(5) BCLR 491
(CC) at paras [32] and [33]
[19]
Afrox
Healthcare Bpk v Strydom
2002 (6) SA 21
(SCA) at para [27]
[20]
Afrox
,
supra
at
para [29]
[21]
Afrox
,
supra
at
para [28]
[22]
Nkala
,
supra
at para [209]
[23]
Nkala
,
supra
at
para [200]
[24]
J
W v Williams-Ashman NO & Others
2020 (4) SA 567
(WCC) at para [72]
[25]
Nkala
,
supra
at
para [203]
[26]
Nkala
,
supra
at
para [204]
[27]
The
answer to this question is probably most aptly described in the
Institutes
of Justinian,
(
Sandars
The
Institutes of Justinian
7
th
ed (1962))
wherein
it was stated that “
the
action was personal to the person injured
”.
Personal rights tend to, as a matter of logic, demise with the death
of the person to whom the personal right attaches.
But
Justinian
went
further in order to explain why the action personal to the person
injured could be transferred to a deceased estate. According
to
Justinian
,
a juridical novation took place at the time of
litis
contestatio
having
been reached. This is confirmed by
Voet
who states that
litis
contestatio
causes
“
the
thing claimed
”
in “
actions
in personam
”
to become a “
thing
in suit
.”
This has the effect of perpetuating actions which would otherwise be
lost by death (
Voet
,
supra
at 162)
.
It
must be remembered that in Roman Law, once
litis contestatio
had
been reached, the suit had to be pronounced upon in order to give
finality to the dispute between the parties. Otherwise stated,
in
the context of
in personam
claims, the intention to pursue a
personal right had been vested in law for judicial pronouncement. A
clear and unequivocal intention
to pursue an
in personam
claim has thus been demonstrated.
[28]
KS
,
supra
at
fn 9
[29]
Par
[236]
[30]
Law
Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1941 (WA), section 4(1), (2)
and (2a); Administration and Probate Act 1958 (Vic), section
29(2A),
Dust Diseases Tribunal Act 1989 (NSW), s12B; Succession Act 1981
(Qld), section 66(2A); Survival of Causes of Action
Act 1940 (SA),
section 3(2); Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT), section 16(4);
Damages (Scotland) Act 1976, 1993 and 2011.
# [31]Potchefstroom
Electronic Law Journal Vol 7 No. 2 (2004)Development
of the common law in view of Sections 39(2) and 173 of the
Constitutionper
LTC Harms
[31]
Potchefstroom
Electronic Law Journal Vol 7 No. 2 (2004)
Development
of the common law in view of Sections 39(2) and 173 of the
Constitution
per
LTC Harms
[32]
Mighty
Solutions CC t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd &
Another
2016
(1) SA 621
(CC) at paras [36] to [38]
“
[36].
Our common law evolved from an ancient society in which slavery was
lawful, through centuries of feudalism, colonialism,
discrimination,
sexism and exploitation. Furthermore, apartheid laws and practices
permeated and to some extent delegitimised
much of the pre-1994
South African legal system. Courts have a duty to develop the common
law – like customary law –
to accord with the Bill of
Rights.
[37]
Caution is called for though. It is tempting to regard precedents
from the pre democratic era with suspicion. This may be
more so when
language is used, which some may regard as archaic and reminiscent
of a patriarchal feudal era, as when the Court
in Kala Singh said
that “it does not lie in the mouth of a lessee to question the
title of his landlord”. However,
the mere fact that common law
principles are sourced from pre-constitutional case law is not
always relevant. Age is not necessarily
a reason to change. Some of
the lessons gained from human experience over the ages are timeless
and have passed the logical and
moral tests of time. The
Constitution indeed recognises the existing common law and customary
law. … Furthermore, legal
certainty is essential for the rule
of law – a constitutional value.
[38]
Before a court proceeds to develop the common law, it must (a)
determine exactly what the common law position is; (b) then
consider
the underlying reasons for it; and (c) enquire whether the rule
offends the spirit, purport and object of the Bill of
Rights and
thus requires development. Furthermore, it must (d) consider
precisely how the common law could be amended; and (e)
take into
account the wider consequences of the proposed change on that area
of law.”
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