T.S.M obo S.B.M v Eskom Holdings Limited SOC and Another (3967/2020) [2023] ZAFSHC 343 (31 August 2023)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Delict — Negligence — Absolution from the instance — Plaintiff claiming damages for injuries sustained by minor child from contact with electrical powerlines — Defendant seeking absolution on grounds of insufficient evidence regarding ownership of powerlines and location of incident — Court held that evidence presented met minimum threshold for reasonable belief in potential liability, dismissing application for absolution and allowing case to proceed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These proceedings concerned a delictual action for damages arising from injuries sustained by a minor child through contact with electricity infrastructure. The plaintiff, T.S.M[…] acting on behalf of her minor son, S.B.M[…], sued Eskom Holdings Limited SOC as defendant. Letsemeng Local Municipality was joined by Eskom as a third party, on the basis that the Municipality was alleged (by Eskom) to be the registered owner of the relevant property and/or electricity infrastructure.


The judgment addressed a procedural interlocutory stage in the trial. After the plaintiff closed her case on the merits, Eskom brought an application for absolution from the instance. The court was therefore not deciding final liability or quantum, but whether the plaintiff had presented sufficient evidence to require Eskom to answer.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether Eskom bore delictual responsibility for injuries suffered when the minor came into contact with an electrical powerline or conductor, with particular controversy around the precise mechanism of contact (overhead line versus wire on the ground) and the ownership/responsibility for the electrical infrastructure at the place where the incident occurred.


2. Material Facts


The court treated as established on the evidence led thus far that the minor suffered electrical burns to his right hand and arm and to both feet as a result of an electrical shock after coming into contact with a powerline/conductor.


On the plaintiff’s version as supported in evidence, the incident occurred on farm land known as Rorichshoop, described as open land. The minor testified that, while looking for his sister, he had to duck under an overhead powerline hanging low. He did not notice a wire lying on the ground, and he then stepped on the wire, suffering the electrical shock and consequent burns.


The judgment identified a material tension between the pleaded case and the further particulars. In the particulars of claim, the allegation was that the minor came into contact with electrical powerlines suspended above the ground and supported by poles and/or pylons. In the plaintiff’s further particulars, it was stated that the minor had stepped on the electrical powerline with both feet. The court accepted, for purposes of the absolution inquiry, that the evidence supported that the minor stepped on a powerline/conductor with both feet, and it considered the photographs tendered to be consistent with injuries to both feet.


The court accepted that, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, there was no direct evidence proving that the electrical infrastructure at the location belonged to Eskom or that Eskom bore responsibility for those powerlines on that land. The defendant’s position (as advanced in argument) was that the plaintiff had not proved the precise location sufficiently to link the infrastructure to Eskom. It was also common cause on the pleadings that Eskom admitted it was a licensee as defined in section 1 of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006.


It was also material, from the procedural posture of the case as described by the court, that Eskom had joined the Municipality as a third party, alleging that the Municipality was the registered owner of the property and/or powerlines concerned and that the Municipality’s negligence was the direct cause of the plaintiff’s damages. This reflected a case in which responsibility for the harmful event was, on Eskom’s stance, potentially attributable elsewhere, rather than a concession that Eskom was not a proper party.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether Eskom was entitled to absolution from the instance at the close of the plaintiff’s case. This required the court to determine whether there was evidence upon which a court could or might (not should) find for the plaintiff on the merits.


A further legal issue concerned the significance of section 25 of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006, namely whether its deeming provision (presumption of negligence in civil proceedings against a licensee for electricity-caused injury) affected the assessment of whether the plaintiff had met the minimum evidentiary threshold to survive absolution.


The dispute at this stage primarily involved the application of law to fact, with some factual uncertainty (notably as to the ownership/responsibility for the electrical infrastructure and the precise location), and an evaluative judgment about whether the plaintiff’s evidence had crossed the minimal threshold required to continue.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by restating the governing test for absolution from the instance: whether there is evidence upon which a court, applying its mind reasonably to such evidence, could or might find for the plaintiff. The court relied on authority confirming that the threshold is not whether the plaintiff ought to succeed, but whether the evidence is sufficient to require an answer.


Applying this test to the evidence, the court accepted that the plaintiff’s case, as led, established that the incident occurred on the farm land identified as Rorichshoop, and that the minor stepped on a powerline/conductor with both feet. The court noted that the photographs tendered suggested injuries to both feet, and it treated that as supportive of the version that the minor’s feet were involved in the electrical contact.


The court acknowledged the force of Eskom’s criticism that there was, at that stage, no evidence directly proving that the electrical infrastructure at the place of the incident belonged to Eskom or that Eskom was responsible for it. However, the court considered that this deficiency was, to a large extent, addressed by section 25 of the Electricity Regulation Act. The court quoted the section, which provides that in civil proceedings against a licensee arising out of injury caused “in any other manner” by means of electricity generated, transmitted or distributed by a licensee, the injury is deemed to have been caused by the negligence of the licensee, unless there is credible evidence to the contrary. In the court’s view, given Eskom’s admission that it was a licensee, this statutory provision materially supported the plaintiff in meeting the minimum evidentiary threshold at the absolution stage.


The court also relied on Appellate Division authority dealing with cases where defendants deny liability and point to one another as being responsible. In such circumstances, absolution should not be granted at the close of the plaintiff’s case if there is evidence upon which a court could reasonably hold that either the one or the other defendant, or both, may be legally liable. The court considered the present matter to fall within that category, particularly in light of Eskom’s joinder of the Municipality and the contestation over who bore responsibility for the infrastructure.


On that basis, and framed expressly as an interest of justice evaluation, the court concluded that the case should be determined on the full body of evidence that all parties might choose to present, rather than being terminated at the close of the plaintiff’s case.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed Eskom’s application for absolution from the instance. Eskom was ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the absolution application. The trial on the merits was thereby left to proceed with the defendant’s case (and any further evidence) rather than being concluded in Eskom’s favour at that stage.


Cases Cited


McCarthy Ltd v Absa Bank Ltd 2010 (2) SA 321 (SCA).


Mazibuko v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1982 (3) SA 125 (A).


Legislation Cited


Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006, section 1.


Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006, section 25.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court found that, on the evidence led by the plaintiff, there was a sufficient evidentiary basis upon which a court could or might find for the plaintiff, applying the correct threshold for absolution from the instance.


The court further found that the absence of direct proof, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, that Eskom owned or was responsible for the electrical infrastructure was materially mitigated by section 25 of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006, given Eskom’s admission that it was a licensee and the statutory deeming of negligence in civil proceedings arising from electricity-caused injury.


The court also held that, where responsibility was contested and alternative responsibility was raised through the joinder of a third party, it was appropriate in the interests of justice to allow the matter to be decided on all the evidence rather than granting absolution at the end of the plaintiff’s case.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that an application for absolution from the instance at the close of a plaintiff’s case succeeds only if there is no evidence upon which a court, reasonably applying its mind, could or might find for the plaintiff. The inquiry is threshold-based and does not require the court to decide whether the plaintiff should ultimately succeed.


The judgment applied section 25 of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006, which creates a deeming provision in civil proceedings against a licensee for injury caused by electricity generated, transmitted, or distributed by the licensee: such injury is deemed to have been caused by the negligence of the licensee unless there is credible evidence to the contrary. In this case, the provision was treated as significant to the minimum evidentiary threshold required to defeat absolution, especially given the defendant’s admitted status as a licensee.


The judgment applied the principle that where defendants deny liability and attribute responsibility to one another, a court should be slow to grant absolution at the end of the plaintiff’s case if the evidence could support a finding that either party (or both) may be liable. In such cases, the interests of justice may favour a determination after all parties have presented their evidence.

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[2023] ZAFSHC 343
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T.S.M obo S.B.M v Eskom Holdings Limited SOC and Another (3967/2020) [2023] ZAFSHC 343 (31 August 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,
FREE STATE
DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case number:
3967/2020
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
CIRCULATE TO
MAGISTRATES: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
T.
S. M[…] obo S. B. M[…]
Plaintiff
And
ESKOM
HOLDINGS LIMITED SOC
Defendant
And
LETSEMENG
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Third
Party
HEARD
ON:
25 AUGUST 2023
JUDGEMENT
BY:
LOUBSER,
J
DELIVERED
ON:
31
AUGUST 2023
[1]
In the action before this court, the plaintiff is claiming damages
from the defendant arising
from injuries sustained by her minor son
when he came into contact with electrical powerlines, which contact
caused electrical
burns on his right hand and arm and on both his
feet.
[2]
The plaintiff called five witnesses to testify in support of her
claim. After the close of her case
on the merits, an application was
launched on behalf of the defendant for an order of absolution from
the instance. This judgement
pertains to that application.
[3]
The minor child who sustained the injuries, was one of the witnesses
who gave testimony as to
the occurrence of the incident. He testified
that on the day of the incident, he went to look for his sister on a
piece of open
land where he had to duck under an overhead powerline
that was hanging low. In doing so, he did not notice an electrical
wire that
was lying on the ground, and he inadvertently stepped on
the wire and became burnt by an electrical shock.
[4]
It was contended on behalf of the defendant that there was no
evidence of the precise location
of the incident, with the result
that there was no evidence that the electrical structures, poles and
powerlines at the place of
the incident belonged to the defendant. It
was further contended that the evidence did not support the
plaintiff’s case on
the pleadings, in that it was alleged in
the particulars of claim that the minor child came into contact with
electrical powerlines,
which were suspended above the ground and
supported by poles and/or pylons. In the plaintiff’s response
to a request for
further particulars by the defendant, however, it
was stated that the minor child had stepped on the electrical
powerline with
both feet.
[5]
The plaintiff handed in photographs of the place where the incident
allegedly happened, and no
electrical wires lying on the ground are
visible on these photographs. The photographs also show the burns on
the minor child’s
body, including the bandages covering the
child’s feet.
[6]
The defendant furthermore contends that there was no evidence showing
who the owner of the land
in question was, or whose electrical
infrastructure existed on that land. In the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim, it is
alleged that the defendant was the owner
or was responsible for the powerlines on the premises where the
accident occurred. There
is no evidence supporting this allegation,
it was contended on behalf of the defendant. In this respect it needs
mentioning that
the defendant has joined the Letsemeng Local
Municipality as a third party to the action, claiming that the
Municipality was in
fact the registered owner of the property and/or
the powerlines concerned. On this basis, the defendant alleges that
the negligence
of the Municipality was the direct cause of the
plaintiff’s damages. It also needs mentioning that in its plea,
the defendant
admitted that it was a licensee as defined in section 1
of the Electricity Regulation Act.
[1]
[7]
Now when absolution of the instance is sought, the test is whether
there is evidence upon which
a court, applying its mind reasonably to
such evidence, could or might (not should, or ought to) find for the
plaintiff.
[2]
[8]
The evidence so far in this case is that the incident occurred on the
farm land known as Rorichshoop,
as alleged in the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim. The further evidence is that the minor child
stepped on a powerline with
both feet on that farm land, as alleged
in the plaintiff’s further particulars. The photographs handed
in suggest injuries
to both the feet of the minor child. While it is
true that there is no evidence that the electrical infrastructure at
that place
belonged to the defendant, or that the defendant carried
the responsibility for the powerlines on the farm land, I am
nevertheless
of the opinion that the plaintiff has reached the
minimum threshold where a court, applying its mind reasonably, could
or might
find for the plaintiff.
[9]
This is so, because the lack of evidence in respect of the ownership
or the responsibility for the
electrical infrastructure, is in my
view to a large extent cured by the provisions of section 25 of the
Act referred to above.
Section 25 provides as follows:

In
any civil proceedings against a licensee arising out of damage or
injury caused by induction or electrolysis or in any other
manner by
means of electricity generated, transmitted or distributed by a
licensee, such damage or injury is deemed to have been
caused by the
negligence of the licensee, unless there is credible evidence to the
contrary.”
[10]
In addition, the Appellate Division has held
[3]
that in a case where the defendants have denied liability and have
pointed to one another as being the party responsible
for the
plaintiff’s damages, the court should not grant an application
for absolution at the suit of either defendant at
the end of the
plaintiff’s case if there is evidence upon which a court,
applying its mind reasonably, could hold that either
the one or the
other defendant, or both of them, are legally liable. The present
case no doubt falls within the same category.
I am therefore of the
view that it is in the interest of justice that the case should be
decided on the evidence which all the
parties might choose to place
before the court. Consequently, the following order is made:
1.
The defendant’s application for absolution from the instance is
dismissed, the defendant
to pay the costs occasioned by the
application.
P. J. LOUBSER, J
For
the Plaintiffs:
Adv.
H. E. De la Rey
Instructed
by:
Honey
Attorneys
Bloemfontein
For
the Defendant:
Adv.
C. Snyman
Instructed
by:
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys
Bloemfontein
/roosthuizen
[1]
Act
4 of 2006
[2]
For
instance, McCarthy Ltd vs Absa Bank Ltd
2010 (2) SA 321
(SCA) at par
[21]
[3]
In
Mazibuko v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
1982 (3) SA 125
(A) at 135 C-E