M.Z obo Y v Road Accident Fund (487/2021) [2023] ZAFSHC 242 (15 June 2023)

80 Reportability
Personal Injury Law - Road Accident Fund

Brief Summary

Damages — Loss of earning capacity — Claim for damages arising from a minor child's brain injury and fractured leg sustained in a motor vehicle accident — Plaintiff contending that interim award of R1,500,000 insufficient — Expert evidence regarding child's academic performance discredited due to lack of disclosure of prior academic failures — Court finding that injuries did not compromise child's intellectual potential — Interim award deemed sufficient to cover potential loss of earnings.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a delictual damages action arising from a pedestrian motor vehicle accident, in which the plaintiff, M.Z. acting on behalf of a minor child (Y), claimed compensation from the Road Accident Fund for damages allegedly sustained as a result of the collision.


The matter came before the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, and was decided by Daniso J, with the hearing taking place on multiple dates during August 2022, November 2022, and January 2023, and judgment delivered electronically on 15 June 2023.


The procedural history reflected that the parties reached a partial settlement on 21 April 2022. The defendant conceded the merits at 100% in favour of the plaintiff in respect of proven or agreed damages, agreed to pay general damages of R800,000, paid an interim award of R1,500,000 in respect of loss of earning capacity, and tendered a statutory undertaking for future medical expenses under section 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996. The remaining dispute concerned whether the plaintiff had proved entitlement to additional compensation for loss of earning capacity over and above the interim amount.


The dispute was located in the assessment of loss of earning capacity for a minor child, premised on the plaintiff’s contention that the child suffered a mild traumatic brain injury and associated neurocognitive sequelae that impaired academic performance and future vocational prospects. The defendant disputed that the evidence established that the accident-related injuries compromised the child’s intellectual potential and earning capacity to the extent alleged.


2. Material Facts


The court accepted as common cause that on 8 March 2020 the minor child was involved in a pedestrian motor vehicle accident and sustained, at least, a mild traumatic brain injury and a fractured tibia and fibula of the right leg. It was also common cause that the defendant’s liability had been settled on the basis of 100% merits, and that payments and undertakings were made as recorded in the settlement of 21 April 2022, including the interim award for loss of earning capacity.


The plaintiff’s case on factual causation and impact was advanced primarily through the plaintiff’s testimony and expert evidence. The plaintiff testified that the child was in Grade 4 at the time of the accident and that there was a noticeable change in behaviour thereafter, including aggression, forgetfulness, delayed responsiveness, resistance to schoolwork, and an alleged decline in academic performance culminating in failure of Grade 4. The plaintiff further described social consequences (teasing about a scar), diminished interest in soccer, reluctance to attend school, and a threat of self-harm if compelled to attend.


On the plaintiff’s version as presented to certain experts, the child had not repeated any grades prior to the accident, and the post-accident academic decline was therefore attributed to accident-related neurocognitive impairment. The plaintiff’s clinical psychologist and educational psychologist both proceeded from this premise, linking poor academic outcomes and reduced educational/vocational prospects to the accident injuries.


A significant portion of the material facts, however, concerned pre-accident academic performance and background, which emerged through the evidence of the school principal and through cross-examination. The principal of the child’s school, H[...] P[...] Primary School, testified that the child transferred from another school during February 2019 (while in Grade 3). The principal explained that the child failed the first two terms after transfer, improved in the third term, and passed at year end. In 2020, the child failed the first term, and after the accident and school disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the child later failed and was progressed to the next grade on the aggregate of other learners rather than merit. The child then failed again at the end of 2021, and by January 2023 had progressed to Grade 6.


The principal attributed the initial poor performance at the new school to adjustment difficulties arising from a change from a smaller village school to a larger school environment, and testified that teachers observed the need for academic support and interventions. The school reports placed before the court were treated as corroborative documentary material regarding academic struggles and the nature of comments recorded by educators.


The court further treated as material the fact that, under cross-examination, it emerged that the plaintiff did not disclose to her experts that the child had failed grades prior to the accident. In addition, the plaintiff did not inform the experts that the child had lived with grandparents in the Eastern Cape at an earlier stage, that he had suffered from fits, and that he had experienced emotional difficulty connected to the death of a grandfather regarded as a father figure. The plaintiff also conceded she had no personal knowledge of the child’s academic performance in Grades 1 and 2 because the child lived with grandparents then. The plaintiff’s experts indicated they were not apprised of this information and had relied on the plaintiff’s account.


The defendant’s case was advanced through expert reports delivered under affidavit, including the educational psychologist and industrial psychologist. Those experts opined that, even without certain early school reports, the available information suggested pre-accident intellectual functioning that was already below average, with repetition of a grade before the accident, and that the child’s pre- and post-morbid intellectual functioning and likely educational and career trajectory remained essentially the same.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the plaintiff discharged the onus of proof to establish that the minor child’s accident-related injuries caused neurocognitive and academic deficits that compromised his intellectual potential and consequently resulted in a quantifiable loss of earning capacity exceeding the interim amount already paid.


A further issue concerned the evidentiary footing of expert opinion in circumstances where material background facts were not disclosed to experts. This required the court to evaluate the reliability and weight of expert evidence that was based substantially on the history supplied by the plaintiff, and to determine whether that evidence was sufficiently corroborated by objective material such as school reports.


There was also a procedural/evidentiary issue relating to the admission of the defendant’s expert evidence under Uniform Rule 38(2), in circumstances where the defendant sought to rely on affidavits rather than oral testimony, and the plaintiff objected.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact in the assessment of damages for loss of earning capacity, including a value-based assessment of whether the factual foundation justified the substantial additional quantum sought.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court proceeded from the principle that the plaintiff bears the duty to place before the court sufficient information to enable a just and equitable assessment of the damages alleged, particularly in a claim for loss of earning capacity. The court considered that, when assessing whether a minor child’s intellectual ability has been compromised, the inquiry must take account of relevant background, including family history, personal background, and pre-morbid intellectual ability.


On the procedural issue under Uniform Rule 38(2), the court held that the plaintiff’s objection to the admission of the defendant’s experts’ affidavits was unreasonable. The court’s reasoning emphasised that the objection was based on the defendant’s experts not having certain school reports when compiling their reports, while the same limitation applied to the plaintiff’s experts. The court regarded the onus as resting on the plaintiff to prove the alleged neurocognitive sequelae and their consequences for earning capacity, and accordingly overruled the objection and admitted the defendant’s expert affidavit evidence.


Turning to the merits of the loss-of-earning-capacity claim, the court found that there were material discrepancies in the evidence advanced by the plaintiff concerning the child’s pre- and post-morbid intellectual functioning. Although the plaintiff and her experts sought to present the child as having had unremarkable academic progression prior to the accident and as having deteriorated thereafter due to accident-related injury, the court treated the school reports for the three years preceding the accident as demonstrating that the child had already been struggling academically before the collision.


The court was not persuaded that the post-accident academic difficulties could be attributed to an accident-caused impairment of intellectual potential on the evidence presented. It held that the struggle continued after the accident and characterised it as attributable to unwillingness rather than inability to do schoolwork, on the basis of the material before it, including the school reporting and the principal’s evidence regarding interventions and support.


A key aspect of the court’s evaluation concerned the quality and basis of the plaintiff’s expert evidence. The court held that the expert opinions were tainted and discredited because they lacked corroborating evidence and were grounded substantially in what the experts were told by the plaintiff, where the plaintiff had not disclosed material facts such as prior grade failures and other relevant background. In support of this approach to evaluating expert evidence, the court referred to authority emphasising that expert conclusions must be properly supported and not merely adopted from untested premises supplied by a party.


On the totality of the evidence, the court concluded that it had not been established that the injuries sustained in the accident compromised the minor child’s intellectual potential. Because that causal link and impact were not proved to the required standard, the court held that the plaintiff was not entitled to the additional loss-of-earning-capacity award sought beyond the interim payment already made.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the plaintiff’s claim for additional compensation for loss of earning capacity, thereby refusing the further amount claimed over and above the interim award of R1,500,000 already paid pursuant to the settlement.


The court granted a costs order in favour of the defendant, awarding the defendant costs with effect from 21 April 2022.


Cases Cited


S v Mngomezulu 1972 (1) SA 797 (A) at 798–799.


R v Turner [1975] 1 All ER 70.


Legislation Cited


Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996, section 17(4)(a).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 38(2).


Held


The court held that the plaintiff did not discharge the onus of proving that the minor child’s accident-related injuries compromised his intellectual potential so as to justify an additional award for loss of earning capacity beyond the interim payment already made.


The court further held that the plaintiff’s opposition to the admission of the defendant’s expert evidence on affidavit under Uniform Rule 38(2) was unreasonable in the circumstances, and the affidavits were admitted.


The plaintiff’s additional loss-of-earning-capacity claim was dismissed, and the defendant was awarded costs from 21 April 2022.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A claimant who seeks damages for loss of earning capacity bears the burden of placing before the court sufficient and reliable information to enable a fair and equitable assessment of that loss. In claims involving minors and alleged neurocognitive sequelae, the court may consider contextual factors including pre-morbid intellectual functioning and educational history when determining whether accident injuries caused the alleged impairment.


Expert evidence must be assessed with regard to its factual foundation and corroboration. Where expert opinions materially depend on a party’s account and that account is shown to be incomplete or inaccurate on material issues, the probative value of the expert conclusions may be diminished. The court may regard such evidence as unreliable where it is not supported by objective material and is based primarily on what experts were told by an interested party.


Under Uniform Rule 38(2), a court may admit evidence by affidavit when sufficient reason exists, but where a party reasonably requires attendance for cross-examination and the witness can be produced, affidavit evidence should not be used. The reasonableness of an objection to affidavit evidence is assessed in context, including the parity (or lack thereof) in the evidentiary position of the parties and the nature of the information said to be missing from expert assessments.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAFSHC 242
|

|

M.Z obo Y v Road Accident Fund (487/2021) [2023] ZAFSHC 242 (15 June 2023)

FLYNOTE:
MZ
obo Y v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAFSHC 242
ACTUARIAL
– Loss of income – Child – Experts contending that
brain injury affecting academic performance –
Plaintiff did not
disclose to the experts that child failed the three grades before
accident – Expert evidence tainted and
discredited by lack of
corroborating evidence – Merely relying on what they were told
by the plaintiff – Not established
that injures have
compromised his intellectual potential – Interim award of
R1,500,000 sufficient to cover any possible loss
of earnings.
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,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
number: 487/2021
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
M[...]:
Z[...]
obo
Y[...]
Plaintiff
And
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
HEARD
ON:
02 & 03 AUGUST 2022
15
& 16 NOVEMBER 2022
24
& 25 JANUARY 2023
HEADS
OF ARGUMENT FILED:
14, 20
FEBRUARY & 01 MARCH 2023
JUDGMENT
BY:
DANISO,
J
DELIVERED
ON:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email and by release to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 15 June 2023 at 9H00.
[1]
The plaintiff claims damages for loss of earning capacity resulting
from a mild traumatic brain
injury and a fractured tibia and fibula
of the right leg sustained by her minor child in a pedestrian motor
vehicle accident which
occurred on 08 March 2020.
[2]
Following the accident, the plaintiff’s claim was settled
between the parties on 21 April
2022 and on the basis that the
defendant:
2.1.
conceded the merits 100%
in favour of
the plaintiff in respect of proven or agreed damages;
2.2.
undertook to pay the plaintiff’s general damages in the amount
of R800 000.00 and an interim award
in the amount of
R1 500 000.00 in respect of loss of earning capacity; and
2.3.    to
furnish the plaintiff with the statutory undertaking for future
medical expenses in terms of section 17(4)
(a) of the Road Accident
Fund Act 56 of 1996 (“The Act”).
[3]
It is the plaintiff’s case that the interim payment of
R1 500 000.00 in respect
of loss of earning capacity is not
adequate the amount that would be fair and just is the amount of
R9 973 400.00 and
this is based on the evidence proffered
to prove the plaintiff’s case namely: the
plaintiff
testified that at the time of the accident the minor child was in
grade 4. Pursuant to the accident the minor child’s
behaviour
has changed in that he
has become aggressive. He also has an
element of forgetfulness. He would be asked to do something but would
come back later to ask
what is it that he was sent to do.  He
takes long to respond when spoken to and refuses to do his school
work and his academic
performance which was satisfactory before the
accident has declined to the extent that he failed grade 4. He
continues to struggle
with his school work as a result the school has
recommended that he should be sent to a special school.  Before
the accident
he also enjoyed playing soccer. After the accident he no
longer participates in that sport he is also reluctant to go to
school
because his school mates make fun of his scar, he even
threatened to kill himself if he is forced to go to school.
[4]
Dr Lindelwa Grootboom is a clinical psychologist. She attributes the
minor child’s poor
academic performance to the brain injury and
this is based on the fact that prior the accident, the minor child
did not repeat
a grade. He successfully completed all the grades 1 to
3, after the accident he had to condoned from grade 4 to grade 5. The
injury
has also has affected his neurocognitive functions hence he
suffers from forgetfulness, poor self- esteem due to the teasing at

school because he was in an accident which also has a negative impact
on his learning capabilities, academic progress and occupational

choices. Psychotherapeutic treatment is recommended for both the
minor child and the family to understand the effects of the accident.
[5]
Dr Lavio Thandiwe Nhlapho is an educational psychologist, she
concurred with Dr Grootboom’s
conclusions that minor child’s
academic challenges are attributable to the accident injuries as the
minor child has never
repeated a grade until after the accident.
Pre-accident the minor child had a 50/50% chance of obtaining Matric
and would
have obtained Matric and he also had the potential to
achieve a post degree qualification. Post-accident, his performance
started
declining as a result he will no longer be able to venture to
a Bachelor’s Degree he may not even be able to obtain Matric.

He may benefit from special school placement for children with mild
mental retardation.
[6]
The minor child’s school principal Mr, Mahlubi Desmond Tsipane
told the court that the minor
child was transferred to his school,
H[...] P[...] Primary School (H[...] P[...]) from M[...] C[...]
School where he was in grade
3. He started in February 2019 a month
after the first term began. He failed the first two terms, in the
third term he improved
and subsequently passed at the end year. In
the following year (2020), he failed the first term. During the next
term he was involved
in the accident on 8 March 2020 and due to the
Covid 19 pandemic the school closed on 18 March 2020 as a result no
marks are recorded
for that term. In term 3 he was back at school. He
failed that term and at the end of the year he was progressed to
grade 5 solely
on the aggregate of other learners. He once again
failed grade 5 at the end of 2021. At the time of the hearing
(January 2023)
the minor child had progressed to grade 6.
[7]
Mr Tsipane attributed the minor child’s poor academic
performance in the first two terms
at H[...] P[...] to acclimatising
to the new environment because his previous school was a small
village school while H[...] P[...]
was a big school hence from the
third term he improved as he was now settled into the new
environment. With regard to his performance
post the accident, his
teachers observed that he needed support in a form of extra classes
and it is also clear from the reports
that he required some form of
interventions. Exhibit “E8-12” it is respectively stated
that: “...
Zama ukuzimisela
” in Isixhosa loosely
translated “
he must try to improve his performance

and that he “
must spend more time in his books
.”
After he received that support he passed.
[8]
That was in short the plaintiff’s
evidence, in addition to the viva voce evidence, documentary evidence
was handed in by concurrence
of both parties and marked as Exhibits:
the educational psychologist’s report (
Exhibit
“A4-A22
and “
C56-71”),
the reports by the neurosurgeon
Dr Kelly
, industrial psychologist
Mr
Maturere
, orthopaedic surgeon
Dr
Bongobi
,
Dr Rene Walker
,
clinical psychologist Dr Grootboom and actuarial
Mr Charl Du
Plessis
(
Exhibit
“C1—34”
) and the
school
reports (
Exhibit “E1-E15”).
[9]
The cross-examination of the plaintiff and her witnesses revealed
that the plaintiff did not disclose
to the experts that the minor
child had failed the three grades before the accident. When it was
put to her that her experts were
adamant that the minor child never
failed a grade before the accident her explanation was simply that
the experts were mistaken.
[10]
The plaintiff also did not inform the experts that while at M[...]
C[...] School, the minor child lived with
his grandparents in the
Eastern Cape and the reason the minor child was transferred to H[...]
P[...] in the Free State where the
plaintiff lived was because he has
suffered from fits and during that time he was also not emotionally
well due to the death of
his grandfather whom he regarded as a
father. According to the plaintiff’s experts, the minor child
had no history of any
ailments physiological or psychological. They
said there were never appraised of this information.
[11]    It
does not end there, despite having testified that the minor child had
performed well prior the accident
she ultimately conceded that she
had no knowledge about the minor child’s academic performance
in grade 1 and 2 as the minor
child lived with his grandparents at
that time.
[12]
On the other side, the
defendant
handed in experts’ reports accompanied by affidavits by the
educational psychologist Dr Ezette du Plessis and the
Industrial
Psychologist Ms Louisa Maritz (Exhibit “H & J”)
and
closed its case without calling witnesses.
[13]
Uniform Rule 38(2) provides:

(2)
The witnesses at the trial of any action shall be orally examined,
but a court may at any time, for sufficient reason, order
that all or
any of the evidence to be adduced at any trial be given on affidavit
or that the affidavit of any witness be read at
the hearing, on such
terms and conditions as to it may seem meet: Provided that where it
appears to the court that any other party
reasonably requires the
attendance of a witness for cross-examination, and such witness can
be produced, the evidence of such witness
shall not be given on
affidavit.”
[14]
The plaintiff’s objection to the defendant’s application
for an order to admit the defendant’s
experts’ affidavits
into evidence
is
in my view unreasonable due to the fact that the opposition is
premised on the grounds that the defendants’ expert witnesses

were not in possession of the minor child’s school reports
relating to grade 1 to 3 when they complied their respective reposts

whereas the same applies with the plaintiff’s experts. The onus
is on the plaintiff to prove that
that
the injuries sustained by the minor child have resulted in the
deficits relied upon in this claim. A
ccordingly,
the objection is overruled.
[15]
According to the defendants’ experts despite not being provided
with the school reports relating to
the minor child’s academic
performance in grade 1 and 2, having regard to the information
alluded to by the plaintiff’s
expert pertaining to his
performance in grade 3, the minor child’s pre-accident
intellectual ability was already below average
in that he was already
repeating a grade before the accident therefore his intellectual
ability has not been compromised by the
accident.
[16]
The defendant’s experts opine that the minor child’s pre
and post morbid intellectual functioning,
academic profile, likely
qualification level and career paths remain the same.
[17]    It
was argued that the plaintiff is not entitled to the additional
amount she seeks. The defendant has already
agreed to pay the
plaintiff an amount of R1 500 000.00 towards loss of
earnings and this amount should be sufficient
to cover any possible
loss of earnings. Based on these reasons the claim the balance of the
amount claimed by the plaintiff ought
to be dismissed with costs.
[18]
I am in agreement with the defendant’s contentions.
The
duty is on the plaintiff to provide the court with sufficient
information to enable it to make a just and equitable assessment
of
the damages she alleges to have sustained. In addition to
the
family history, the minor child’s background including the
minor child’s pre-morbid intellectual ability is a factor
that
the court takes into account in the determination of whether the
minor child’s intellectual ability has been compromised
by the
injuries he sustained in the accident.
[19]
In this matter there
are material discrepancies in the
evidence proffered by the plaintiff with regard to the minor’s
child intellectual ability
pre-morbid and post-morbid.
[20]
Much as the plaintiff and her expert witnesses sought
to proffer that there was nothing untoward about the minor child’s
pre-morbid
intellectual ability and that his bad performance post
-accident was attributable to the injuries he sustained in the
accident.
The school reports for the three years preceding the
accident, Exhibit “E1-4” attest to the minor child’s
struggle
with his school work. After the accident, the struggle
continued and it is a result of his unwillingness and not inability
to do
his school work.
[21]
The
expert evidence is tainted and
discredited
by the lack of corroborating evidence they relied upon in their
conclusions by merely relying on what they were told
by the
plaintiff. (
S
v Mngomezulu
1972
(1) SA 797
(A)
at 798-799;
R
v Turner
[1975]
1 All ER
70).
[22]    I
am thus not persuaded that on the available evidence, it has been
established that the injures that the
minor child sustained in the
accident have compromised his intellectual potential. The plaintiff
is not entitled to the award she
seeks.
[23]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
The
plaintiff’s claim for loss of earning capacity is dismissed.
2.
The defendant
is awarded the costs with effect 21 April 2022.
N.S. DANISO, J
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
on behalf of the plaintiff:
Adv. MC Baloyi-Mbembele
Instructed
by:                                              SB

Seshibe Attorneys
C/O
Matsepes Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
Counsel
on behalf of the defendant:
Ms. J. Gouws
Instructed
by:                                              Office

of the State attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN