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[2016] ZAGPJHC 328
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A v Road Accident Fund (42987/2012) [2016] ZAGPJHC 328 (28 November 2016)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
42987/2012
Not
reportable
Not
of interest to other judges
Revised.
In
the matter between:
A,
A
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
Judgment
Van
der Linde, J
:
[1]
This is a trial action in which almost everything has been settled,
except the appropriate contingency provision to be made
in the
calculation of the plaintiff's having regard to scenario of future
loss of earnings, and costs. Two issues require to be
decided in
respect of costs. They are whether the costs of two counsel was a
reasonable precaution, and whether a special costs
order should
issue, by reason of the defendant's conduct in the litigation.
[2]
Neither party called any witnesses. The plaintiff handed up as
exhibit D an agreed list of admissions. Also handed up and received
as exhibits A, B, and C were trial bundles comprising the expert
reports that the parties had caused to be prepared for the trial.
Both parties then closed their cases.
[3]
Merits have been settled, with the defendant accepting liability for
the injuries and damages. Past hospital expenses were not
settled,
but there is no opposition to the claim. There is no explanation by
the defendant for not accepting liability for them,
and yet not
disputing them.
[4]
General damages are also not settled. The defendant had, at a late
stage, decided to reject the plaintiff's certification that
he had
suffered a serious head injury, and that issue has been referred to
the appeals panel of the HPCSA. That is not an issue
that will engage
us.
[5]
The plaintiff was a front passenger in a collision when he was 17
years old. He was traveling in a Golf motor vehicle. It was
struck
from the right front, and capsized. His orthopedic injuries involved
the right hip, pelvis, lower back, and fracture of
the left forearm.
He also suffered a head injury, described as mild to moderate, with a
resultant neuro-cognitive fallout.
[6]
At the time of his injuries, he was in grade ten. His sibling example
indicated a three year tertiary education, possibly even
one
post-graduate degree. He had his heart set on becoming a forensic
investigator.
[7]
The accident and injuries have changed that. He scraped through grade
eleven and flunked grade twelve. He passed the second
time. After
falling around a bit, he landed a job as as an apprentice motor
mechanic at Mercedes Rosebank. He is currently in his
third year
there, but has been promoted only once. There is a factual dispute
about the reason for that. The plaintiff contends
that this is a
function of his injuries. He is no longer as agile as before, nor is
he able to engage in strenuous work. He suffers
from PTS and it is
common cause that he is no longer an equal competitor for employment
in the open labour market. The defendant
says that it is a function
of the timing and availability of examinations. This is not a dispute
that I can resolve; but the parties'
list of admissions have provided
much which is common cause, as will appear below.
[8]
The plaintiff contends that an appropriate contingency provision is
40%, but the defendant argues for 28%.
[9]
It is trite that a contingency provision is a function of the
exercise of a discretion in the wide or loose sense, meaning that
the
court takes into account a number of factors and arrives at a view in
respect of which another court is in as good a position
to reach a
conclusion. It may therefore be upset on appeal. It is not like the
exercise of a discretion in the narrow sense, where
the court is
called upon to express a conclusion within a narrow band. In such an
instance a court of appeal does not upset the
exercise of a
discretion unless it finds that some misdirection has occurred.
[10]It
is not clear to me how the defendant arrives at its proposed 28%
contingency provision. It is common cause that there should
be a
differential between the but for and having regard to scenarios, the
but for provision being agreed at 20%. The question is
then really
whether the having regard to provision should be double the but for
provision, or whether it should be half of the
but for provision.
[11]I
have not have the benefit of the seeing the plaintiff testify. All I
have to go on are the medical reports and the admissions
that were
handed up by agreement. There is some limitation inherent in this,
but this is not to say it is not laudable that the
parties were able
to contain the matter in this regard, and to this extent. As I have
remarked, there is much material that is
common cause in the list of
admissions that have been received as annexure D.
[12]I
have come to the conclusion, on the basis of those common cause
facts, that a provision double the normal is fair and reasonable,
for
these reasons. First, Dr Miller, a neurosurgeon, says that the
plaintiff has suffered a mild to moderate head injury. That
is a not
inconsequential impairment. Dr Visser, a psychiatrist, opines that
the plaintiff presents with chronic low mood, mood
dysfunction, poor
motivation, and low self-esteem. These are features that will likely
make the plaintiff's employment prospects
risky, particularly since
Dr Visser says that the chronicity of these symptoms make complete
resolution of the symptoms unlikely.
Mr Sampson, a clinical
psychologist, records mild deficits in psychomotor speed, perception
scanning, visuomotor tracking, information
processing ability, manual
dexterity, and complex age-appropriate tasks.
[13]These
are all facilities that he would ordinarily require to have a
competitive edge in the employment scene. His shortcomings
in those
respects make for an individual that suffers from a significant
impairment in the job market, and having to choose between
either
roughly 10% or roughly 20% more than the 20% usual contingency
provision, I believe the upper margin of 20% more fairly
presents the
plaintiff's challenges.
[14]The
past hospital and medical expenses have been calculated at R2470, and
no submissions have been made as to why they should
not be
accepted. On this basis then the damages come to R5,806,615.
[15]That
leaves the question of two counsel and special costs. In my view two
counsel was a reasonable precaution, given the size
of the claim, the
number of experts involved, the breadth of their disciplines, and the
need right up to the trial date to prepare
on those issues. It is
necessary to prepare and guide the experts in their own preparation
for the trial, to prepare cross-examination,
and to ensure the
pre-trial processes have been complied with. In a trial of this
magnitude that demands that attention be given
to many matters, a
litigant would be well-advised that two counsel are required to
ensure that they are all properly attended to.
[16]Special
costs are sought, mainly on the bases that the defendant failed to
co-operate in attending a meaningful pre-trial conference;
delays in
giving instructions to settle; and especially the frequent changing
in position of the defendant's industrial psychologist.
I deal with
these three issues in turn.
[17]The
failure to attend a meaningful pre-trial conference timeously meant
that the Deputy Judge President had to direct the parties
to hold a
pre-trial conference when the matter was called on the day for which
it had been set down for trial. That is a serious
transgression. The
defendant is a known litigant, familiar with court processes. In this
division of the high court, in particular,
it overwhelms the trial
roll.
[18]It
is no excuse whatsoever to assert that the defendant's attorney or
counsel was not available. It is no excuse whatsoever
to assert that
a pre-trial conference was partly held by requesting that the list of
questions that would be posed could be sent.
The very point of a
pre-trial conference is that legal representatives, properly briefed
and properly mandated, should attend and
debate the disputed issues
face to face. It is, for instance, not acceptable at all that parties
turn up at pre-trial conferences,
swap questions, and walk away on
the basis that they will consider their respective positions and
revert. Likewise, and by way
of extrapolation, it is not acceptable
at all for a legal representative to say that s/he cannot attend the
pre-trial conference
because of too busy a program, and to ask
instead that the questions to be asked be typed up and sent through
for consideration
and instructions.
[19]Legal
representatives can of course choose to do that, but then their claim
to be allocated a trial judge will simply be back-ranked,
and they
may be mulcted in costs, for failing to engage properly in the
system, in accordance with rules designed to make civil
litigation
focus on issues that are truly in dispute, and are thus truly
triable. That makes for saving of judicial time, a scarce
resource,
and is generally in the interests of the administration of justice.
In my view, much as one is disinclined to penalize
the defendant
because it fulfils a public function, this conduct cannot be
permitted to be perpetuated.
[20]I
am not in a position to comment on delays in the giving of
instructions to settle. It is true that one gets the impression
from
the way RAF cases are generally conducted that there are quite
unacceptable delays in getting ready for trial. One sees that
frequently in the trial readiness certification courts, where the RAF
preparation is more often than not way behind the preparation
of the
plaintiffs. It is not clear whether this is a deliberate strategy,
perhaps to make litigation weary plaintiffs taste the
tyranny of
litigation. However, I cannot say whether in this particular case
such a strategy was employed. The facts placed before
me are just too
parsimonious to come to that conclusion.
[21]Finally,
there is the issue of the defendant's industrial psychologist who
prepared, as I have it, and according to the submissions
of counsel
for the plaintiff, no less than seven versions of a proposed joint
minute. That is very disconcerting conduct. It escalates
costs
inordinately, because the opposing experts must consider, over and
over again, the freshly proposed minute. It also escalates
costs on
the side that calls the expert, because experts are remunerated on
the basis of their time spent. The defendant argues
that it should
not be punished for its expert's remissness. That may be so, but why
should the plaintiff be punished then? Perhaps
a special costs order
should be made against the defendant's industrial psychologist, but
she was not notified that such an order
would be sought against her.
[22]In
all these circumstances I have decided to accede to the request for
costs on a punitive scale, as between attorney and own
client.
[23]Ms
Docrat handed up a draft order that would apply in the event that I
was amenable to making the orders that I have concluded
above I would
be making. In the result I make the following order:
I
make an order in terms of the draft order attached hereto marked "X",
completed by me, initialed and dated.
WHG
van der Linde
Judge,
High Court
Johannesburg
For
the plaintiff: Adv FF Docrat
Adv N Motala
Instructed
by:
Wadee
& Wadee Attorneys
(c/o
Yousha Tayob Attorneys)
1
st
Floor, 7 Bonanza Street
Selby,
Ext 9
Johannesburg
011 854
2534
For
the defendant: Adv M Panyane
Instructed
by:
Maribana
Makgoka Inc
13
th
Floor Marble Towers
208
– 212 Jeppe Street
Johannesburg
011 333
1845
Ref:
Mr W Mailula/RAF1/HO/317
Dates
trial: 24 and 25 November, 2016
Date
judgment: 28 November, 206