Burger v Road Accident Fund (2799/2018) [2022] ZAFSHC 313 (2 November 2022)

80 Reportability
Personal Injury Law - Road Accident Fund

Brief Summary

Delict — Loss of earnings — Claim for damages arising from motor vehicle accident — Plaintiff, a qualified diesel mechanic, sustained injuries affecting his earning capacity — Dispute over inclusion of free use of business premises in loss calculation — Court found plaintiff's claim of free use unsubstantiated and excluded it from loss assessment — Compensation awarded for past and future loss of earnings calculated at R3 187 560.00.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a delictual damages action arising from a motor vehicle accident, in which the plaintiff claimed compensation from the Road Accident Fund for losses suffered as a result of bodily injuries sustained in the collision. The proceedings came before the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein.


The parties were Roucher Burger (plaintiff/applicant in the heading) and the Road Accident Fund (defendant/respondent). By the time the matter proceeded to adjudication, several issues had already been resolved between the parties.


The procedural posture was that liability had been settled on the basis that the insured driver was solely negligent, and the claims relating to future medical expenses and general damages had also been settled. The only remaining dispute for determination by the court was the quantification of the plaintiff’s past and future loss of earnings.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned the proper calculation of patrimonial loss flowing from impaired earning capacity, and, more specifically, whether an alleged “free benefit” (the asserted free use of business premises) formed part of the plaintiff’s pre-accident income for purposes of quantifying loss of earnings.


2. Material Facts


The motor vehicle accident occurred on 29 January 2016. It was accepted (following settlement) that the insured driver’s negligence was the sole cause of the accident, and the court proceeded on the basis that the plaintiff had suffered injuries with sequelae affecting his work capacity.


The plaintiff was a qualified diesel mechanic. Before the collision, he had been employed in the transport and mechanical sector, including employment at Volvo SA and BZM Transport, and thereafter as a workshop manager at Hestony Transport. The salary advices placed before the court reflected earnings of R34 450 per month, together with a thirteenth cheque, producing an annual income recorded as R447 525.00.


The plaintiff left Hestony Transport to start his own business. Shortly after becoming self-employed, the accident occurred. The plaintiff’s version was that, after starting his business, he entered into a working arrangement with Knottco. He testified that Knottco paid him R22 745.00 per month to supervise and service clients in respect of repair work referred to him, and that he was also permitted to pursue his trade in addition to that arrangement.


A central factual dispute concerned the plaintiff’s assertion that he enjoyed the free use of Knottco’s business premises (workshop space), and that the value of this free use should be included in the calculation of his pre-accident earnings. In support of the alleged value of the premises, the plaintiff called Mr Carl Buchow, who expressed the opinion that the rental value of the space (described as 525 square metres, including charges such as water and electricity) totalled R26 250.00 per month. The defendant disputed that this alleged benefit should be taken into account.


As to injury and functional outcome, Dr J F Ziervogel, an orthopaedic surgeon, reported that the plaintiff sustained a humeral shaft fracture treated surgically by open reduction and internal fixation with plate and screws. At consultation, the plaintiff’s shoulder displayed serious limitation of active movement and pain. The plaintiff had also sustained a compression fracture, with the opinion recorded that this might cause future mechanical lower backache. Dr Ziervogel expressed the view that the plaintiff could not do the job for which he was trained and would be better suited to supervisory duties.


The industrial psychology evidence, particularly that of Ms Susan Van Jaarsveld, together with a joint minute compiled with the respondent’s industrial psychologist, recorded agreement that, absent the collision, the plaintiff would probably have continued as a self-employed diesel mechanic or in similar work until retirement age, but that he could not currently compete fairly for work in his field in the open labour market where heavy physical exertion and increased mobility are required. It was also accepted that he would be disadvantaged in efficiency, effectiveness, and productivity relative to uninjured counterparts.


It was treated as common cause that the plaintiff could not return to work as a diesel mechanic in his own business and that during recuperation he performed no remunerative work and generated no income. The judgment also recorded that, although he later returned to work, he did so with considerable pain and discomfort, and that he could perform only supervisory duties, with occasional exertion required beyond that. Because of work challenges he was forced to close his business and became employed as a depot manager, reportedly earning about R30 000.00 per month. The court further recorded (in its narrative of post-accident employment) that after closing his sole proprietorship he secured employment with Strada earning R18 000 per month, and that during 2017 he became employed in Middleburg as a depot manager.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the quantification of damages for past and future loss of earnings arising from diminished earning capacity, given that liability had been settled and the existence of some earning impairment was largely accepted.


A key issue was one of application of law to fact, with a significant factual component: whether the plaintiff had proved, on the probabilities, that he enjoyed the beneficial free use of Knottco’s premises and whether that benefit properly formed part of his pre-accident earning package for purposes of calculating loss of earnings.


A further issue concerned the selection and acceptance of actuarial scenarios and contingencies in order to determine the appropriate amount of compensation, including which expert calculations were to be preferred on the evidence placed before the court.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the claim on the basis of established delictual principles governing patrimonial loss. It endorsed the proposition that a defendant must make good the difference between the value of the plaintiff’s estate after the commission of the delict and what it would have been worth but for the delict, and that a person’s capacity to earn money forms part of their estate. The court relied on authority recognising that impairment of earning capacity constitutes compensable loss where it diminishes the plaintiff’s patrimony.


On the contested question of the alleged “free benefit” (the free use of Knottco premises), the court rejected the plaintiff’s contention that this evidence was undisputed and should be accepted. The court attached weight to the fact that, during cross-examination, it became apparent that the plaintiff had not informed his expert witnesses, including his industrial psychologist, of this alleged beneficial free use. The court regarded the absence of explanation for that omission as material to the reliability of the plaintiff’s version. The court further considered the plaintiff’s explanation regarding the whereabouts and contactability of the owner of Knottco to be unsatisfactory, noting that his account shifted from apparent lack of knowledge to an assertion that the owner had emigrated and could be contacted. In the court’s evaluation, these features undermined the reliability of the asserted arrangement.


On that basis, the court found that the submission that the plaintiff had beneficial free use of part of Knottco’s premises free of charge had to be rejected, and it followed that the purported benefit could not be included when calculating loss of earnings.


Turning to quantification, the court accepted that the plaintiff’s earning capacity had been compromised and that this constituted a loss for which he was entitled to compensation. The court aligned itself with the industrial psychological assessment that the plaintiff should be compensated for the differential between what he would have earned as a diesel mechanic (uninjured scenario) and what he could now earn given his limitations and the move into more supervisory roles.


On the actuarial evidence, the court recorded that the parties’ actuaries used the same general methodology (the actuarial present value method) and the same mortality tables, and that a joint minute had been accepted in evidence. The court expressed a preference for the respondent actuary Mr Grant Pretorius’s first scenario for calculating loss of earnings, noting that it was based on the report of the industrial psychologist called by and commissioned for the plaintiff. The court further noted the agreement reflected in the joint minute that, should the court accept the earning scenarios and contingencies set out by Pretorius, the actuaries were in agreement with the results in Pretorius’s report.


Applying those accepted assumptions and the contingencies and capping reflected by Pretorius, the court determined that the plaintiff’s proven losses comprised a past loss and a future loss, which together yielded the total compensable amount. The court’s quantification thus flowed from (a) rejecting the free-premises benefit as unproven, (b) accepting diminished earning capacity, and (c) adopting the actuarial scenario and contingencies it considered supported by the evidence and the experts’ joint position.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court awarded the plaintiff R3 187 560.00 as compensation for loss of earnings, comprising R742 776.00 in past loss of earnings and R2 444 784.00 in future loss of earnings.


The defendant was ordered to pay the award into the plaintiff’s attorneys’ trust account as specified in the order. The court further ordered that, if the defendant did not pay the capital amount within 180 days from the date of the order, the defendant would be liable for interest at 7% per annum, compounded and calculated fourteen days from the date of the order (as framed in the judgment).


The defendant was ordered to pay the plaintiff’s taxed or agreed party-and-party costs on a High Court scale, subject to the taxing master’s discretion, including the reasonable qualifying fees of the identified expert witnesses (Dr Ziervogel, Ms Van Jaarsveld, and Mr Wim Loots), together with costs attendant upon obtaining payment under the order. Provision was also made for taxation steps if costs were not agreed.


Cases Cited


Dippenaar v Shield Insurance Co Ltd 1979 (2) SA 904 (A) at 917B–D.


Union Government (Minister of Railways and Harbours) v Warneke 1911 AD 657.


Union and National Insurance Co Ltd v Coetzee 1970 (1) SA 295 (A).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the text of the judgment provided.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the text of the judgment provided.


Held


The court held that the plaintiff had proved a compensable impairment of earning capacity and was entitled to damages representing the difference between his uninjured earning trajectory and his post-accident earning capacity as supported by the accepted expert evidence.


The court further held that the plaintiff had not established, on the probabilities, that he enjoyed the alleged free use of Knottco’s premises as a benefit properly to be included in the pre-accident earnings calculation, and the claimed value of that alleged benefit was therefore excluded from the computation of loss.


On the accepted actuarial scenario (Pretorius’s first scenario) and contingencies, the court held that the plaintiff’s total loss of earnings amounted to R3 187 560.00, and it granted judgment for that sum with ancillary payment, interest (on the terms stated), and costs orders.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, under the lex Aquilia, delictual patrimonial damages are assessed by comparing the value of the plaintiff’s estate after the delict with what it would have been worth absent the delict, and awarding the difference.


It applied the established rule that earning capacity forms part of a person’s patrimony, and that the loss or impairment of earning capacity constitutes compensable loss to the extent that it diminishes the estate, even where quantification requires estimation and expert modelling.


The judgment also reflects that alleged components of pre-accident remuneration or benefits (such as the asserted free use of premises) must be proved on the probabilities; where the court finds the underlying factual basis unreliable or inadequately supported, such a benefit will not be incorporated into the damages computation.


Finally, it reflects the approach that, where actuaries employ common methodology and produce a joint minute indicating agreement conditional on the court’s acceptance of specified assumptions, the court may adopt the quantification flowing from the scenario it finds consistent with the accepted expert and factual foundation.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 313
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Burger v Road Accident Fund (2799/2018) [2022] ZAFSHC 313 (2 November 2022)

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
No: 2799 /2018
In
the matter between:
ROUCHER
BURGER
APPLICANT
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BY
:
MOLITSOANE,
J
HEARD
ON:
22
JULY
2022
DELIVERED
ON:
The
judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to· the
parties' legal representatives by email and released to SAFLII on 2
November 2022. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 02
November 2022 at 14: 30.
[1]
The plaintiff claims damages arising out
of the motor vehicle accident which occurred on 29 January 2016. The
issue of the liability
of the respondent was settled on the basis
that the insured driver was solely negligent in causing the accident.
The issues relating
to future medical expenses as well as general
damages were also settled. This court is thus only called upon to
adjudicate the
claim for past and future loss of earnings.
[2]
The plaintiff testified on his injuries,
their sequelae as well as his pre­ accident income potential. He
is a qualified diesel
mechanic having done his apprenticeship with
Raubex Construction. He took employment with Volvo SA and earned
about R23 000 per
month. He thereafter took employment with BZM
Transport earning a salary in the amount of R23 187 per month. From
BZM he was employed
as a workshop manager at Hestony Transport. The
salary advices of the plaintiff handed into evidence reflect his
monthly earnings
to have been R34 450 per month. He also received a
thirteenth cheque. His annual income amounted to R447 525.00.
[3]
He left the employment of Hestony
Transport to start up his own business. Shortly after being
self-employed, he was involved in
an accident which led to these
proceedings. It is his evidence that after he started his business,
he entered into a working agreement
with Knottco. In terms of the
said agreement he was given the permission to use the business
premises of Knottco free of charge.
Knottco paid him a salary to
supervise and service its clients in respect of repair work Knottco
referred to him. He testified
that over and above the agreement he
had with Knottco, the latter allowed him to pursue his trade. Knottco
paid him R22 745.00
on a monthly basis.
[4]
With regard to the free use of the
workshop,
he
called Mr Carl Buchow. The latter testified about the value of the
business premises. He opined that the area used as a rental
space by
the plaintiff was, however, 525 square metres which totaled a rental
of R26 250.00 per month having taken into account
the rental space
per square metre, water consumption and electricity.
[5]
This claim of the plaintiff that he had free use of the business
premises of Knottco is at the heart of this dispute
as the plaintiff
contends that the value of the use of the workshop without paying any
consideration must be taken into account
in calculating his loss of
income. The defendant holds otherwise.
[6]
Dr Zievogel, an orthopaedic surgeon, in
his report handed into evidence indicated that the plaintiff
sustained a humeral shaft fracture
which was treated by performing an
open reduction and internal fixation with a plate and
screws.
According
to
Dr
Ziervogel,
the
plaintiff
probably
had
a
four part fracture and internal fixation with a plate and multiple
screws.
[7]
At the time of consultation with Dr
Ziervogel, it was noted that the plaintiff's shoulder had serious
limitation of active movement
and was painful. The plaintiff had also
sustained a compression fracture. The Dr opined that the compression
might in future cause
mechanical lower backache.
The
Dr also opined that the plaintiff could not do the job for which he
was trained for but was more suited to do supervisory duties.
[8]
Ms Susan Van Jaarsveld, an industrial
psychologist, also testified on behalf of the plaintiff. She,
together with Me Kheswa, also
an industrial psychologist commissioned
by the respondent, compiled joint minutes. Both industrial
psychologists agree that had
the collision not occurred, the
plaintiff would in all likelihood have been self-employed as a diesel
mechanic or would have worked
in a similar position until the
retirement age. They both opined that the plaintiff cannot currently
compete fairly for a job in
his field in the open labour market,
especially in an occupation that requires increased mobility and
heavy physical exertion.
They further hold the view that the
plaintiff will be disadvantaged in terms of efficiency, effectiveness
and productivity when
compared to his uninjured counterparts.
[9]
It is common cause that the plaintiff
could not return to her work as a diesel mechanic in his own
business. During the said period
he did not perform any kind of
remunerative work while he was recuperating. He thus generated no
income. Though he later returned
to work, he performed his work with
considerable pain and discomfort. Due to the injuries and its
sequelae he can only perform
supervisory duties although from time to
time he is expected to exert himself in order to do other duties. Due
to the challenges
in his work he was forced to close business and is
currently employed as a depot manager. He has apparently been
employed by a
sympathetic employer and earns about R30 000. 00 per
month.
[10]
The parties essentially agree on the aspect that there has been loss
of earnings and the future loss save whether the
use of the business
premises free of charge should be taken into account in the
calculation of the said loss.
[11]
That the plaintiff had his own business
as a sole proprietor and also earned a salary in the amount of R22
745 from Knottco is not
in dispute.The plaintiff contends that the
probabilities are in his favour for this court to find that he had
the use of the business
premises free of charge. It is the case for
the plaintiff that in this regard his evidence is undisputed and
uncontroverted. It
is further contended that there is nothing in the
evidence of the plaintiff which indicate to the contrary and this, it
is submitted
is an indication that the plaintiff's version is more
reliable.
[12]
I am unable to agree with the submission
on behalf of the plaintiff with regard to the above contention.
It became clear during cross examination
that at no stage did the plaintiff inform any of his expert
witnesses, including Ms Van
Jaarsveld, that he had this beneficial
free use of Knottco premises. He has not explained why he did not
inform his industrial
psychologist about the free use of the business
premises. When
probed
about
the
whereabouts
of
the
owner
of
Knottco
his
explanation was unsatisfactory. Initially it appeared as if he did
not know the whereabouts of the owner. He later recapitulated
and
informed court that the owner had apparently emigrated and could be
contacted. His evidence on this aspect was unsatisfactory.
I
accordingly find that the submission that the plaintiff had
beneficial use of part of Knottco free of charge stands to be
rejected.
With the same token, such purported use cannot be taken
into account in the calculation of loss of earnings.
[13]
Mr Wim Loots, an actuary, compiled three
actuarial reports dated 9 June 2019, 23 February 2022 and 16 June
2022 on behalf of the
plaintiff. On the other hand, Mr Grant
Pretorius, also an actuary, compiled an actuarial
report
on
behalf
of
the
defendant.
These
two
experts
also compiled a joint minute which was
accepted in evidence. They confirm that they used the same actuarial
methodology, namely,
the actuarial present value method in the
calculation of the loss of earnings. They further used the same table
of mortality.
[14]
In his report of 16 June 2022 Wim Loots
was provided with the report of Susan Van Jaarsveld as well as one of
Grant Pretorius for
the purposes of calculating
the present
value of the potential loss of earnings
of the claimant. He was instructed by
the claimant's attorneys, had the accident not occurred, to base his
calculations on the following
earnings:
Date
Age
Earnings
Terms
Increases
Sources
29/01/1016
33.25
R60
000pm
01/20166
inflation
Total
earnings at date of accident
inclusive
of free benefits
06/10/2047
65.00
Retirement
[16]
On the post-accident earnings, he was
instructed to base his calculations on the earnings based on Grant
Pretorius' calculations.
These are fully set out in the report and
because of the finding I make, it is unnecessary to set them out in
detail. In my view
the calculation of the loss of earnings of the
plaintiff by Pretorius in the first scenario has to be preferred. He
calculated
the said loss based on two scenarios. Firstly, the
calculation is based on the report of the industrial psychologist
called and
commissioned by the plaintiff. The second scenario was
calculated as instructed by the legal representatives of the
respondent
[17]
It is not in dispute that the plaintiff
was not able to return to his work as a diesel mechanic after the
accident due to the injuries
he sustained. He only returned at the
end of October 2015. Before his return following his accident, he
earned no income. He was
forced to close his business which he
conducted as a sole proprietor. At the end of 2015 he secured
employment with Strada and
earned R18 000 per month. During 2017 he
became employed in Middleburg as Depot Manager. It is undisputed that
the earning capacity
of the plaintiff has been compromised. That
compromised earning capacity constitute a loss for which the
plaintiff is entitled
to compensation.
[18]
In
Dippenaar
v Shield Insurance
Co
Ltd
[1]
the
court said:
[39)
"In our law, under the /ex Aquilia, the defendant must make good
the difference between the value of the plaintiff's estate
after the
commission of the delict and the value it would have had if the
delict had not been committed.
The
capacity to earn money is considered to be part of
a
person's estate and the loss or
impairment of that capacity constitutes
a
loss, if such loss diminishes the
estate. This was the approach in Union Government (Minister of
Railways and Harbours) v Warneke
1911 AD 657
at 665 where the
following appears:
'In
later Roman law property came to mean the universitas of the
plaintiff's rights and duties, and the object of the action was
to
recover the difference between the universitas
as
it was affer the act f damage, and as
it would have been if the act had not been committed (Greuber at
269). Any element of attachment
or affection for the thing damaged
was rigorously excluded. And this principle was fully recognised by
the law of Holland.
'
See
also Union and National Insurance Co Ltd v Coetzee
1970 (1)
SA
295
(A) where damagers were claimed and allowed by reason of
impairment of earning qapacity."
[19]
I am in agreement with the opinion of
Ms. Van Jaarsveld that seeing that the plaintiff can no longer be
able to perform the work
of a diesel mechanic he must be compensated
for the difference between what he could have earned as a diesel
mechanic and what
he currently earns. In the joint minutes the
actuaries agree, inter alia, that should this court accept the
earning scenarios as
set out in the report by Pretorius, as well as
the contingencies illustrated, then they agreed with the report of
Pretorius.
[20]
The loss of earnings calculated having
taken into account the contingencies and capping as illustrated by
Pretorius, in my view
establishes the amount of compensation due to
the plaintiff. The report reflects a past loss of earnings of R742
776.00 and future
loss of earnings of R2 444 784 .00 which all add up
to the total loss of earnings in the amount of R3 187 560.
I am of the view that the plaintiff has
to be compensated in the amount of R3 187 560.00. The following order
is thus made:
ORDER
1.
The defendant shall pay the plaintiff
the sum of
R3 187 560
in
respect of loss of earnings;
2.
The defendant shall pay the
abovementioned amount into the plaintiff's attorneys account details
of which are as follows:
ACCOUNT
HOLDER:        MAREE &
PARTNERS - Trust
BANK:ABSA,
Brandwag,
Bloemfontein
Branch
Code:                    632005
Account
No:                      [....]
Deposit
Reference:
JB4037
3.
In the event that the defendant does
not, within one hundred and eighty days from date on which this order
is handed down, make
payment of the capital amount, the defendant
will be liable for payment of interest on such amount at 7% (the
statutory rate per
annum) compounded and calculated fourteen days
from date of this order.
4.
The defendant to pay, subject to the
discretion of the taxing master, the plaintiff's taxed or agreed
party to party cost, on a
High Court scale up to and including the
date, when this order is made an order of court, including but not
limited to the following:
5.
The reasonable qualifying fees of the
following experts:
5.1.
Dr. J F Ziervogel;
5.2
Ms. Susan Van Jaarsveld;
5.3
Mr. Wim Loots.
6.
.
The
costs attendant upon obtaining the payment of the amounts referred to
in this order
7.
In the event that costs are not agreed
the parties agrees as follows:
7.1.
The plaintiff shall serve a notice of
taxation on the defendant's attorney of record;
7.2.
The plaintiff shall allow the defendant
fourteen court days to make payment of the taxed cost.
P
E MOLITSOANE, J
Counsel
on behalf of Plaintiff:                            Mr

JJ Maree
Instructed
by:

Maree

& Partners Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
Counsel
on behalf of Defendant:                       Me

C. Bornman
Instructed
by:                                                     State

Attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
Dippenaar v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1979 (2) SA 904
(A) at 917B - D