N.G and Others v Road Accident Fund (3504/2013) [2023] ZAECQBHC 23 (4 April 2023)

82 Reportability

Brief Summary

Delict — Causation — Death resulting from motor vehicle accident — Plaintiffs claiming for loss of support and funeral expenses following the death of the deceased, who sustained injuries in a collision with an unidentified vehicle — Defendant admitting liability but contending that inadequate medical treatment constituted a novus actus interveniens breaking the causal link — Court finding that the death was a direct result of the injuries sustained in the accident, and that the alleged substandard medical care did not constitute a new cause of death — Defendant's argument of intervening cause rejected due to failure to plead special defence formally.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were a delictual claim against the Road Accident Fund for loss of support and funeral expenses arising from the death of X[...] G[...] G[...] (“the deceased”), who had been injured in a motor vehicle collision involving an unidentified insured vehicle.


The parties were the deceased’s dependants as plaintiffs, namely N[...] G[...] (the first plaintiff and spouse) and their two children, X[...] S[...] (second plaintiff) and X[...] G[...] (third plaintiff). The defendant was the Road Accident Fund.


As to procedural history, the matter proceeded to trial after the defendant, on 26 August 2020, conceded liability for 100% of the plaintiffs’ proven damages arising from the deceased’s death. The remaining issues for determination were the plaintiffs’ entitlement to damages for loss of support and funeral expenses, including the question whether the death was causally attributable to the collision. Judgment was reserved on 23 November 2022 and delivered on 4 April 2023.


The dispute concerned whether the deceased’s death resulted directly from injuries sustained in the collision, or whether an alleged intervening factor—namely alleged substandard medical care—broke the chain of causation, and, if liability followed, what amounts were proved for the various heads of damages.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that on 8 December 2008 the deceased was injured in a collision with an unidentified motor vehicle and was taken to hospital. The hospital records reflected that upon admission he presented with a fractured left leg and a head injury, including blood draining from the right ear. The leg was placed in a plaster of paris (POP) and he received analgesics for headache complaints. He was discharged the next day, 9 December 2008.


The first plaintiff testified to observations consistent with head injury at the scene and thereafter, including that the deceased’s ear was bleeding and that he had convulsions prior to being loaded into the ambulance. After discharge, the deceased made several visits to medical facilities and continued to complain of headaches and bleeding from the ear. The deceased died on 6 August 2009, and the first plaintiff incurred funeral expenses.


On causation, the plaintiffs relied on the expert evidence of Dr P.J.J. Swartz, a neurologist, who considered the hospital records and an interview with the first plaintiff. Dr Swartz concluded that the deceased’s death was the direct result of significant head trauma sustained in the collision, that the presentation was consistent with a skull base fracture, and that death resulted from complications of that fracture. The defendant presented no expert evidence and led no evidence to contradict Dr Swartz’s conclusions.


On quantum relevant to support, the plaintiffs’ evidence (including an employment questionnaire in evidence as Exhibit A) was that the deceased was employed and earned approximately R3 000 per month, and there was evidence that he could also earn overtime. The actuarial calculations relied upon by the plaintiffs proceeded on the R3 000 monthly earnings figure and excluded the asserted overtime figure. The first plaintiff also proved funeral expenses by production of an invoice from the funeral parlour.


The defendant, while having conceded liability generally, raised argument at trial that alleged substandard medical intervention constituted a novus actus interveniens, and further contended that there was insufficient proof of earnings and that the court should apply contingencies.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether, on the evidence, the deceased’s death was factually and legally caused by the injuries sustained in the motor collision, or whether the chain of causation was broken by an alleged intervening act in the form of substandard medical treatment.


A further legal issue concerned pleading and procedure: whether the defendant could rely on novus actus interveniens as a defence when it had not been pleaded as a special plea, and what consequences followed from raising the point only in cross-examination and argument.


A further issue, involving application of law to fact, was whether the plaintiffs proved the deceased’s earnings and the quantum of loss of support and funeral expenses, and whether contingencies should be applied on the facts as presented.


The dispute thus involved a combination of questions of fact (medical causation and proof of earnings), application of legal causation principles to facts, and a procedural question regarding pleadings and when a defence may be adjudicated.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On causation, the court applied the two-stage approach described in Minister of Police v Skosana 1977 (1) SA 31 (A), distinguishing factual causation (whether the conduct caused or materially contributed to the harm) from legal causation/remoteness (whether the link is sufficiently close for liability to ensue, taking policy considerations into account). The court noted that the same general approach was adopted by the Constitutional Court in Lee v Minister for Correctional Services 2013 (2) SA 144 (CC).


In assessing factual causation, the court accepted Dr Swartz’s expert evidence as uncontroverted and found there was “nothing to gainsay” his opinion that the deceased suffered a skull base fracture and that this injury caused his death. The court reasoned that the skull base fracture was caused by the collision and that, applying the “but for” test, but for the accident the deceased would not have sustained the head injury that led to death. The court referred to Minister of Finance and Others v Gore 2007 (1) SA 111 (SCA) for the proposition that the “but for” enquiry is one of common sense and practical retrospective analysis, rather than scientific certainty, and that a plaintiff need only establish that the wrongful conduct was probably a cause of the loss.


Regarding the defendant’s reliance on novus actus interveniens, the court treated this as raising a special plea because it constituted a defence not flowing from the particulars of claim and which would destroy or postpone the cause of action. Drawing on principles stated in Amler’s Precedents of Pleadings and Erasmus: Superior Court Practice, the court held that such a defence had to be raised formally on the pleadings, and that raising it in cross-examination and argument was not permissible. The court accepted the plaintiffs’ submission that, had such a plea been properly raised, they could have sought the joinder of the allegedly responsible medical entities.


The court further reasoned that even if the defence had been properly pleaded, it would not have succeeded on the facts accepted by the court. The court distinguished Mkhitha v Road Accident Fund (1783/2012) [2015] ZAECMHC (1 October 2015), where the sequelae were found to have arisen from substandard medical intervention that materially altered the outcome. By contrast, in the present matter the court found that the deceased was not treated for the head injury said to have caused death, and that the lack of medical treatment did not constitute a “fresh cause of death” breaking the causal chain. In support of this approach, the court referred to the dictum in S v Mini 1963 (3) SA 188, to the effect that where medical treatment does not introduce a fresh cause of death, the original injury remains the cause.


On damages, the court accepted the plaintiffs’ proof that the deceased was employed and earned R3 000 per month, relying on Exhibit A and the first plaintiff’s uncontroverted testimony. The court noted that the actuarial report was premised on the R3 000 figure and did not include the additional overtime amount. Because the defendant led no evidence to contradict the earnings evidence, the court found no basis to apply contingencies as urged by the defendant in argument. The funeral expenses were held to be proved by the invoice provided.


On costs, the court applied the general principle that costs follow the result and found no reason to depart from that approach.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court held the defendant liable to compensate the plaintiffs for loss of support and funeral expenses, rejecting the defendant’s argument that alleged substandard medical care constituted an intervening cause breaking the chain of causation. The court accepted the plaintiffs’ evidence on earnings and damages, and granted judgment in the amounts supported by the actuarial calculations and documentary proof.


The defendant was ordered to pay the quantified damages to the plaintiffs within 180 calendar days of the order, with interest at 7.75% per annum calculated from 14 days after the date of the order until payment, and interest on taxed costs from 14 days after taxation until payment. Costs were awarded on the party and party scale, including specified counsel and expert-related costs.


Cases Cited


Minister of Police v Skosana 1977 (1) SA 31 (A).


Lee v Minister for Correctional Services 2013 (2) SA 144 (CC).


Minister of Finance and Others v Gore 2007 (1) SA 111 (SCA).


Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden 2002 (6) SA 431 (SCA).


Mkhitha v Road Accident Fund (1783/2012) [2015] ZAECMHC (1 October 2015).


S v Mini 1963 (3) SA 188 (A).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The court found that the plaintiffs proved, on a balance of probabilities, that the deceased died as a result of a skull base fracture and head trauma sustained in the motor collision, applying factual causation principles and accepting unchallenged expert evidence.


The court held that the defendant’s reliance on novus actus interveniens was procedurally impermissible because it was, in substance, a special plea that had not been pleaded. The court further held that, in any event, the alleged lack of medical treatment did not constitute a fresh intervening cause breaking the causal chain in the circumstances.


The court held that the plaintiffs proved the deceased’s earnings and the quantum of loss of support by uncontroverted evidence and actuarial computation, and that funeral expenses were proved by invoice. Judgment was granted in specified amounts with interest, and costs were awarded to the plaintiffs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Causation in delict involves a two-stage enquiry comprising factual causation (whether the act or omission caused or materially contributed to the harm) and legal causation/remoteness (whether the link is sufficiently close for liability to ensue, with policy considerations potentially relevant), as articulated in Minister of Police v Skosana 1977 (1) SA 31 (A) and adopted in Lee v Minister for Correctional Services 2013 (2) SA 144 (CC).


The “but for” test is applied as a practical, common-sense evaluation rather than as a matter requiring scientific certainty. A plaintiff need establish only that the wrongful conduct was probably a cause of the loss, consistent with Minister of Finance and Others v Gore 2007 (1) SA 111 (SCA) (with reference to Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden 2002 (6) SA 431 (SCA)).


A defence amounting to a special plea must be properly pleaded; raising it only in cross-examination or argument is generally not permissible, and absent amendment it will ordinarily not be adjudicated upon, consistent with the approach described in Amler’s Precedents of Pleadings and Erasmus: Superior Court Practice as referenced by the court.


An alleged intervening medical factor will not break the chain of causation unless it constitutes a fresh cause of harm. Where medical treatment does not introduce a fresh cause of death, the original injury may remain the operative cause, consistent with the principle applied by reference to S v Mini 1963 (3) SA 188 (A) and the court’s distinction of Mkhitha v Road Accident Fund (1783/2012) [2015] ZAECMHC (1 October 2015).

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[2023] ZAECQBHC 23
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N.G and Others v Road Accident Fund (3504/2013) [2023] ZAECQBHC 23 (4 April 2023)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
EASTERN
CAPE LOCAL DIVISION – GQEBERHA
Reportable/Not
Reportable
Case
No:  3504/2013
In
the matter between:
N[...]
G[...]
First Plaintiff
X[...]
S[...]
Second Plaintiff
X[...]
G[...]
Third Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MAKAULA
J:
A.
Introduction
:
[1]
The
lis
between the parties is for loss of support and payment
of funeral expenses which is pursuant to the death of X[...] G[...]
G[...]
(the deceased).  On 8 December 2008, the deceased was
injured in a motor collision with an unidentified motor vehicle.

He was taken to hospital.  Upon admission, he presented with a
fractured left leg, and a head injury i.e. blood was draining
from
his right ear, so the hospital records reveal.  The left leg was
put on a plaster of paris (POP) and he was given analgesics
for the
headache he complained about.  The deceased was discharged from
hospital on 9 December 2008.
[2]
Evidence has it, that the deceased made several visits to both the
hospital and clinic
pursuant to his discharge from hospital.  On
26 August 2020, the defendant conceded that it shall be liable for
100% of such
damages the plaintiff may prove arising out of the death
of the deceased.  As aforesaid, outstanding are claims for loss
of
support and funeral expenses.
B.
Background facts
:
[3]
The deceased was married to the first plaintiff, N[...] G[...]
(N[...]) and had two
children X[...] S[...] (X[...]) and X[...]
G[...] (X[...]).  They are the three dependants who are suing
for loss of support.
They basically testified that they
depended on the deceased for support.  X[...] was in Grade 10
when the deceased passed
on.  She could not finished her post
matric course due to financial circumstances and had to seek
employment.  She claims
an amount of R 23 026.00 for loss
of maintenance and support.  X[...] was in Grade 6 when the
deceased passed on.
He continued until he left school in Grade
12.  N[...] and X[...], jointly claim an amount of R 607 735.00
for loss of
maintenance and support.
[4]
N[...] testified that she visited the scene of the accident and found
the deceased
injured.  The deceased’s left leg was broken
and had blood draining out of his right ear.  The deceased had
convulsions
before he was loaded in the ambulance.  At the
hospital the deceased was put on a POP as aforesaid.  She
brought it to
the attention of the medical staff there was blood that
was coming out of the deceased’s ear.  The deceased was
discharged
on 9 December 2008.  At home and when he went for
review, the deceased would complain of headaches and for the blood
that
was draining from his ear.  The deceased died on 6 August
2009.  She incurred funeral cost.
[5]
Dr P.J.J. Swartz, a Neurologist filed an expert report and also
testified.  Relying
on the hospital records and the interview he
had with N[...], Dr Swartz concluded as follows:

Based on the above
information there can be no doubt that Mr G[...]’s demise had
been the direct result of
significant head trauma sustained in the
accident
, and that the less than adequate care he had received
from health care professionals involved in this case had
led to
unnecessary suffering of the patient
and made his death (which
could have been avoided) inevitable.  Everything in the
information above
indicates that the deceased had suffered a skull
base fracture at the time of the accident and that he had suffered
from and died
as a result of complications of a skull fracture
.
. . . Unfortunately no
attention had been paid to his head injury which had clearly been the
cause of his death”.  (Emphasis
added)
[6]
Dr Swartz concluded that the deceased died as a direct result of the
head injury suffered
by the deceased on the day of the accident.
[7]
The defendant neither led evidence nor submitted expert reports.
On the day
of the trial, the defendant raised as legal argument.
(a)
the issue of
novus actus interveniens
, being the sub-standard
medical intervention by the medical staff at the time of admission
and post;
(b)
that there is no evidence presented that the deceased was earning
R3000.00 and R4500.00
when doing overtime
[1]
and further submitted that if the court accepts that the deceased was
employed, it must apply appropriate contingencies.
C.
The issue
:
[8]
The issue is whether the deceased died as a result of a direct injury
sustained in
the accident or there is an intervening factor which
contributed to his death.
D.
Analysis
:
[9]
In
Minister
of Police v Skosana
[2]
Corbett JA defined causation as follows:

Causation in the
law of delict gives rise to two rather distinct problems.  The
first is a factual one and relates to the question
as to whether the
negligent act or omission in question caused or materially
contributed to . . . the harm giving rise to the claim.
If it
did not, then no legal liability can arise and
cadit
quaestio.
If it did, then the second problem becomes relevant, viz –
whether the negligent act or omission is linked to the harm
sufficiently
closely or directly for legal liability to ensue or
whether, as it is said, the harm is too remote.  This is
basically a juridical
problem in which considerations of legal policy
may play a part”.  (Footnotes omitted).
The
same approach was adopted by the Constitutional Court in
Lee
v Minister for Correctional Services
[3]
.
[10]
In the instant matter there is nothing to gainsay what Dr Swartz
opined, that the skull base
fracture was the cause of the death of
the deceased.  It stands to reason that the cause of the skull
base fracture was the
accident that the deceased was involved in on 8
December 2008.  In other words, “but for” the
accident, the deceased
would not have sustained the injury on his
head.  In
Minister
of Finance and Others v Gore
[4]
the following is said about the “but for” test which
applies with equal force in this matter;

Application of the
“but for” test is not based on mathematics, pure science
or philosophy.  It is a matter of common
sense, based on the
practical way in which the ordinary persons mind works against the
background of everyday – life experiences.
Or, as was
pointed out in similar vein by Nugent JA in
Minister of Safety and
Security v Van Duivenboden:

A plaintiff is not
required to establish the causal link will certainty, but only to
establish that the wrongful conduct was probably
a cause of the loss,
which calls for a sensible retrospective analysis of what would
probably have occurred, based upon the evidence
and what can be
expected to occur in the ordinary course of human affairs rather than
metaphysics’.”
[11]
The deceased, had he not been involved in the accident, he would have
been alive and able to
continue to main the plaintiffs.  Therefore
“but for” the injury, he would not have died.  It
has been conceded
by the defendant that the insured unidentified
driver was negligent hence the accident occurred.  The
negligent, wrongful
act of the insured driver led to the accident
that eventually caused the injury which is the cause of the death of
the deceased.
[12]
The defendant submitted that the failure by the medical staff at both
hospitals to properly treat
the deceased is the intervening factor
which broke the chain of events that led to the death of the
deceased.  In other words
had the deceased received proper
treatment, he would have recovered from the injury that ultimately
caused his demise.  In
other words, the defendant argues that
the lack of or the unskilled medical care the deceased received
constitutes a
novus actus interveniens
i.e. an intervening
factor which led or caused the death of the deceased.
[13]
Undoubtedly, the defendant is raising a special plea which has not
been pleaded.  A special
plea is a plea that raises some special
defence that does not flow from the allegations in the particulars of
claim and destroys
or postpones the operation of the cause of action
and it usually precedes the response in the plea to the claim (i.e.
plea over)
[5]
.  A special
plea raises a special defence apart from the merits of the case.
The defendant has not pleaded the defence
of
actus
novus interveniens
relied
upon.  It raised the issue in cross-examination and in
argument.  This procedure cannot be allowed.  A defendant

who has missed his true defence, or who has learned of it only from
the facts which appeared during the trial, must therefore raise
the
defence formally and have it placed on record.  If no amendment
is made to the pleadings, the defence will as a general
rule not be
adjudicated upon
[6]
.  The
defendant has not followed the stated procedure.  The plaintiffs
correctly argued that had the defendant filed
a special plea of this
ilk, they would have sought a joinder of the entities now blamed by
the defendant as responsible for the
death of the deceased.
[14]
In any event even if the plaintiff would have sought the amendment
and filed a special plea,
now relied upon, it would not have
succeeded in its special plea.  I say so because the cause of
action relied upon by the
plaintiffs is that the deceased died as a
direct consequence of the skull base fracture which was as a result
of the negligent
driving of the insured or unidentified driver.
As the plaintiffs submitted, the treatment or lack thereof did not
cause the
death of the deceased.  He died in the same manner and
from the same injury as he would have died had he not been taken to

hospital.  In hospital, the deceased was never treated for the
injury that caused his death.  No act of negligence can
be
attributed to the medical staff in the form of what occurred in the
decided cases relied upon by the defendants.  In
Mkhitha
v Road Accident Fund
[7]
,
the
actus
novus
interveniens
was as a result of the conduct of the orthopaedic surgeon to an
extent that the court reasoned:

It is accepted
from the uncontroverted testimoney (
sic
) of the Plaintiff’s
expert that the present sequelae would not have resulted from the
injuries sustained if the Plaintiff
was properly treated and that the
sequelae of the injuries arose from what he termed sub-standard
medical treatment intervention by the relevant or orthopaedic surgeon

who treated the Plaintiff
.  (Emphasis added).
The
facts of this case are therefore distinguishable from the
Mkhitha
judgment.
Though in a criminal context, the following dictum by Williamson JA,
in
S v
Mini
[8]
is applicable in this matter:

I have read the
judgment prepared in this matter by my Brother Hoexter and I agree
that on the evidence it does not appear that
any fresh cause of death
was introduced by the medical treatment received by the deceased.
In the circumstances it must be
held that the stab wound inflicted by
the appellant caused the death of the deceased”.
[15]
In the same breath, the lack of medical treatment by the medical
staff is not a fresh cause of
death.  The deceased would have
died anyway from the injury even if he had not been taken to the
hospital according to Dr
Swartz.
E.
Damages
:
[16]
The evidence that the deceased was working is contained in Exhibit A,
which is the employment
questionnaire.  Furthermore, the
uncontroverted evidence is that of N[...] which states that he earned
an amount of R 3000.00
per month and the actuarial report is premised
on that amount and it excluded the R 4500.00 which was for overtime.
The defendant
did not present evidence to gainsay N[...]’s
testimony and I see no basis for the application of contingencies as
submitted
by the defendant.  The plaintiff, through the
actuarial reports, has established the damages she has sustained as a
result
of the accident.  The funeral expenses have been proved
by the submission of an invoice from the Funeral Parlour which buried

the deceased.
F.
Costs
:
[17]
I see no need that the costs should not follow the result.
[18]
Consequently, I make the following order.
1.
The Defendant is liable to First Defendant in the sum of R607 735.00
for
loss of maintenance and support and R3 685.00 for funeral
expenses.
2.
Defendant is liable to Second Plaintiff in the sum of R23 026.00.
3.
Defendant is liable to Third Plaintiff in the sum of R87 924.00.
4.
That such amounts are to be paid to the Plaintiff’s within 180
calendar
days from date of this Order.
5.
The interest is to accrue on the said amounts at the legal rate of
7.75% per
annum calculated as from 14 days from the date of this
Order until the date of payment.
6.
The defendant is liable to Plaintiffs, for costs of suit, together
with VAT thereon,
as taxed, on the party and party scale.  Such
costs to include:
6.1
The qualifying expenses, if any, of Mr Loots and Dr Swartz;
6.2
The costs of Plaintiff’s counsel, including trial fees for the
2 days that the matter
was on trial.
6.3
The costs of the preparation of Heads of Argument and the costs of
Plaintiff’s counsel
in presenting further argument on 10
November 2022.
7.
That interest is to accrue on the costs at the legal rate of 7.75%
per annum
payable as from 14 days from date of taxation, until date
of payment.
M
MAKAULA
Judge
of the High Court
Appearance
:
Counsel
for Plaintiffs:
Adv
LA Schubart SC
Instructed
by:
Goldberg
& De Villiers Inc.
For
the Defendant:
Ms OC
Phillips
Instructed
by:
The
Road Accident Fund
East
London
Judgment
reserved:
23
November 2022
Judgment
delivered:
04
April 2023
[1]
In the form of the pay-slips, bank statements, or calling his
employer, co-worker or supervisor.
[2]
1977
(1) SA 31
(A) at 34 E-G.
[3]
2013
(2) SA 144
(CC) at B-C.
[4]
2007
(1) SA 111
(SCA) 125 E-F.
[5]
Amler’s Precedents of Pleadings, 9
th
Edition, Harms at page 5.
[6]
Erasmus: Superior Court Practice 2
nd
Ed. Vol 2 D1-25B and the authorities cited therein.
[7]
1783/2012 [2015] ZAECMHC (1 October 2015) at para 11.
[8]
1963 (3) SA 188
at 192 B.