Oosthuizen and Another v Road Accident Fund (68/2015) [2018] ZAFSHC 167 (25 October 2018)

80 Reportability
Personal Injury Law - Loss of Support

Brief Summary

Damages — Loss of support — Assessment of damages for loss of support due to death — First Plaintiff receiving half of deceased's pension post-death — Court held that pension benefit should not be deducted from loss of support claim — Inheritance of residential property by First Plaintiff not constituting an accelerated benefit and therefore not deductible from loss of support — Actuarial report considered for quantification of damages — Defendant ordered to pay Plaintiffs R905,405.00 as damages for loss of support.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This judgment concerned a quantum-only determination in a claim for damages for loss of support arising from a fatal motor vehicle collision. The proceedings were brought in the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein, before Hefer AJ, with the matter heard on 15 August 2018 and judgment delivered on 25 October 2018.


The parties were Salmina Herculina Johanna Oosthuizen (the first plaintiff, the deceased’s widow) and Zane Oosthuizen (the second plaintiff, the deceased’s grandchild) against the Road Accident Fund (the defendant). The claim arose from the death of Mr Jakobus Hendrikus Oosthuyzen, who was killed as a pedestrian when struck by a vehicle driven by the insured driver.


The procedural position at trial was that liability had already been resolved on the basis of 100% in favour of the plaintiffs. The defendant conceded that the insured driver’s negligence caused the fatal incident on 1 April 2011. The remaining dispute concerned the proper assessment of damages, particularly whether certain post-death financial consequences should affect the quantification of the plaintiffs’ loss of support and which actuarial calculation should be adopted.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the deceased and the first plaintiff were husband and wife, and that the second plaintiff was their grandchild. It was further common cause that the deceased owed a legal duty to maintain and support both plaintiffs, that he did so during his lifetime (including at the time of the collision), and that he would have continued supporting them had he not died in the collision.


The deceased died as a result of the collision on 1 April 2011 in Collins Street, Arboretum, Bloemfontein, when he was struck by the insured driver’s vehicle. The plaintiffs were deprived of the deceased’s financial support due to his death. The deceased had the financial ability to support them, and his income comprised employment income averaging R3 559,00 per month, a pension of R15 279,00 per year, and a medical subsidy of R12 168,00 per year.


The first plaintiff was not employed during the marriage and remained unemployed. After the deceased’s death, the first plaintiff received half of the deceased’s monthly pension, and it was agreed that she would continue to receive this portion until her death.


It was also common cause that the first and second plaintiffs inherited the property where they resided. The deceased was 71 years old at death and would have retired at 75. The first plaintiff was 69 at the time of the incident. The second plaintiff was 18 at the time of the incident.


A further factual aspect relevant to quantification was that an actuarial report prepared by Munro Actuaries presented two scenarios regarding the second plaintiff’s period of dependency, namely dependency ending at age 18 or at age 21. The second plaintiff’s evidence was that he did not complete Grade 12, attended a college where he qualified as an apprentice, and later obtained employment earning about R3 600,00 per month, with his first employment obtained at about age 20. He resided with his grandmother and, on his evidence as assessed by the court, was not fully self-sufficient at the time he began earning.


Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, as the issues remaining after the concession on liability, how the plaintiffs’ loss of support should be quantified in light of certain financial consequences following the death.


The central legal questions were, first, whether the pension payment received by the first plaintiff after the deceased’s death should be treated as income in a manner that reduces the damages for loss of support, having regard to the Assessment of Damages Act 9 of 1969. This was primarily a question of law (statutory interpretation and application) applied to largely common-cause facts.


Second, the court had to decide whether the inheritance of the immovable property (the plaintiffs’ home) constituted an “accelerated benefit” that should be deducted from damages, and if so, how it should be valued. This was a question involving the application of legal principles to facts, including an evaluative assessment of whether the inheritance left the first plaintiff in a better financial position attributable to the death.


Third, the court had to choose between actuarial scenarios by determining the appropriate dependency age for the second plaintiff (18 versus 21). This involved a factual and evaluative judgment based on the evidence of the second plaintiff’s circumstances and the court’s discretion in assessing loss.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the dispute by identifying the governing principles for assessing damages for loss of support and then determining whether the financial consequences relied upon by the defendant were of a kind that should reduce the award.


On the pension issue, the court accepted that after the deceased’s death the first plaintiff’s receipt of half the deceased’s pension constituted income that accrued to her and indirectly benefited the second plaintiff. However, the court held that the Assessment of Damages Act 9 of 1969, and specifically section 1, expressly provides that when damages are assessed for loss of support resulting from a person’s death, no pension (as defined in the Act) that has been or will or may be paid as a result of the death shall be taken into account. The court therefore concluded that although the pension payment was indeed an income stream to the first plaintiff after death, the statute required that it not be deducted from the damages awarded for loss of support.


On the “accelerated benefit” argument concerning the inherited home, the defendant contended that the value of the property (reflected in the liquidation account as R463 640,00) should be treated as an accelerated benefit and deducted from the loss of support, on the basis that inheritance advanced benefits that would otherwise have accrued later and could reduce indebtedness earlier than would have occurred but for the death.


The court set out the general measure of damages for loss of support as the difference between the dependent’s position after the loss and the position the dependent could reasonably have expected had the deceased not died, together with the proposition that any addition to the dependent’s income arising from the death must ordinarily be deducted. Against that general approach, the court relied on authority dealing specifically with inheritance and accelerated benefits.


Applying Lambrakis v Santam Ltd 2002 (3) SA 710 (SCA), the court noted that where property is inherited by a dependent, the relevant inquiry is not the property’s face value but the value of the accelerated accrual, which requires assessing the probabilities that the dependent would have inherited the property had the deceased died later from another cause. The court also referred to Maasberg v Hunt ARS & Hepburn Ltd 1944 WLD, where it was reasoned that if a widow inherits an interest in the matrimonial home, the accelerated receipt may be set off against the loss of accommodation that the deceased provided, and that selling the property would merely require the widow to procure alternative accommodation, meaning no net benefit is necessarily shown.


The court further relied on Mohan and Others v Road Accident Fund 2008 (5) SA 305 (D), where no deduction was made in similar circumstances when the widow and a child continued to reside in the matrimonial home and there was no indication of the home being sold or let to create a new benefit attributable to the death. The court adopted the reasoning that where the dependent remains in the home and would need to replace accommodation if the home were sold, the dependent may be in no better position than before.


On the facts before it, the court found that the indications were that the first plaintiff and her grandson would remain in the inherited home for the foreseeable future. Although the court acknowledged that the second plaintiff might move out at some stage, there was no indication that the first plaintiff would not continue living there, nor that the inheritance would translate into a tangible, additional financial benefit that should reduce support damages. On this basis, the court concluded that the inheritance of the house did not constitute an accelerated benefit requiring deduction from the damages award.


Finally, in selecting the appropriate actuarial scenario, the court considered the second plaintiff’s evidence about his education, apprenticeship, employment history, earnings, and ongoing residence with the first plaintiff. Although he obtained employment around age 20, the court accepted that he was not yet able fully to look after himself at that stage, and that dependency therefore appropriately extended to age 21. In doing so, the court referenced the discretionary nature of quantifying loss, consistent with the principle that the trial judge has a discretion to award what is right in the circumstances.


Outcome and Relief


The court ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiffs R905 405,00 in damages for loss of support.


The court further ordered that if payment was not made within 14 days from the date of judgment, interest at the applicable rate of interest a tempore morae would be payable.


The defendant was ordered to pay the costs of suit.


Cases Cited


Jameson’s Miners v Central South African Railways 1908 TS 575.


Hulley v Cox 1923 AD 234.


Legal Insurance Co Ltd v Botes 1963 (1) SA 608 (A).


Lambrakis v Santam Ltd 2002 (3) SA 710 (SCA).


Maasberg v Hunt ARS & Hepburn Ltd 1944 WLD.


Mohan and Others v Road Accident Fund 2008 (5) SA 305 (D).


Legislation Cited


Assessment of Damages Act 9 of 1969 (section 1).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the portion of the deceased’s pension received by the first plaintiff after his death constituted income in fact but, by operation of section 1 of the Assessment of Damages Act 9 of 1969, it could not be taken into account to reduce damages for loss of support.


The court held further that the inheritance of the matrimonial home by the first plaintiff did not, on the facts, constitute an accelerated benefit justifying a deduction from the loss of support damages, particularly where the first plaintiff and second plaintiff were to remain living in the property and no tangible additional benefit attributable to the death was established.


The court held that the appropriate dependency age for the second plaintiff on the evidence and actuarial scenarios was 21, and it awarded damages accordingly, together with interest (if unpaid within 14 days) and costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Assessment of Damages Act 9 of 1969 establishes that, in assessing damages for loss of support arising from death, certain categories of payments consequent upon death, including pensions as defined, must not be taken into account in reduction of the award, even where such payments accrue to a dependent after the death.


The general measure of damages for loss of support is the comparison between the dependent’s financial position after the death and the position that would reasonably have been expected had the deceased lived, subject to an equitable adjustment and the trial court’s discretion to award what is right in the circumstances.


Where a dependent inherits property upon the deceased’s death, the relevant inquiry is not automatically the market value of the inherited asset, but whether there is an accelerated accrual constituting a real benefit attributable to the death, assessed by reference to probabilities about later inheritance and the dependent’s actual position. In circumstances where continued occupation of the inherited home merely replaces accommodation the deceased would have provided and does not leave the dependent materially better off, a deduction for accelerated benefit may be inappropriate.


In determining the duration of a dependent child’s support, the court may make an evaluative determination (informed by actuarial scenarios and evidence) as to when the dependent is likely to become self-sufficient, and may extend dependency beyond the age of majority where the facts justify that conclusion.

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[2018] ZAFSHC 167
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Oosthuizen and Another v Road Accident Fund (68/2015) [2018] ZAFSHC 167 (25 October 2018)

FREE
STATE HIGH COURT, BLOEMFONTEIN
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
No.: 68/2015
In
the matter between:
SALMINA
HERCULINA JOHANNA
OOSTHUYZEN
1
st
Plaintiff
ZANE
OOSTHUYZEN
2
nd
Plaintiff
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
CORAM:
HEFER, AJ
JUDGMENT:
HEFER, AJ
HEARD
ON:
15 AUGUST 2018
DELIVERED
ON:
25 OCTOBER 2018
[1]
The issue of liability was resolved on the basis of 100% in favour of
the Plaintiffs. The Defendant in other words conceded
that an
incident occurred on the 1
st
of April 2011 at
approximately 15h15 in Collins Street, Arboretum, Bloemfontein during
which incident Mr. Jakobus Hendrikus Oosthuyzen,
being a pedestrian
at the time, was killed through the negligence of the insured driver.
[2]
The following facts are common cause between the parties:
(a) The deceased and the
First Plaintiff were husband and wife;
(b) The Second Plaintiff
is the grandchild of First Plaintiff and the deceased;
(c) The deceased had a
legal duty to financially support and maintain both the First as well
as the Second Plaintiffs;
(d) The deceased passed
away as a result of the incident referred to above when he was hit by
the vehicle driven by the insured
driver;
(e) Both First and Second
Plaintiffs were deprived of the deceased’s financial support as
a result of the deceased’s
death;
(f) The deceased
supported and maintained the First and Second Plaintiffs during his
lifetime and more specifically at the date
of the incident;
(g) The deceased would
have continued to financially both Plaintiffs had he not pass away as
a result of the incident;
(h) The deceased would
have financially supported the Second Plaintiff until he became
self-sufficient;
(i) The deceased had the
financial ability to maintain the First and Second Plaintiffs;
(j) The deceased’s
income, during his lifetime, consisted of:
(i)
income from his job at an average of R3 559,00 per month;
(ii)
income from his pension at R15 279,00 per year; and
(iii)
medical subsidy at R12 168,00 per year.
(k) The First Plaintiff
was not employed during the existence of the marriage and is
currently still unemployed;
(l) The First Plaintiff
receives half of the deceased’s monthly pension which she will
continue to receive until she passes
away;
(m) The First Plaintiff
inherited the property where she currently resides together with the
Second Plaintiff.
(n) The deceased was 71
years old when he passed away and would have retired at the age of
75;
(o) The First Plaintiff
was 69 years old at the time of the incident and the Second Plaintiff
18 years old.
[3]
The issues to be adjudicated upon are:
(a) whether the money
derived from the pension should be regarded as income for the First
Plaintiff; and
(b) the amount as
calculated in the actuary report filed on behalf of the Plaintiffs.
[4]
The aim of the
Assessment of Damages Act, 9 of 1969
was to amend the
law relating to the assessment of damages for loss of support as a
result of a person’s death. In terms
of
Section 1
thereof in
any action in which the cause arose after the commencement of the
Act, when damages are assessed for loss of support
as a result of a
person’s death, no insurance money, pension or benefit which
has been or will or may be paid as a result
of the death, shall be
taken into account.  “
Benefit”
means any
payment by a friendly society or trade union for the relief or
maintenance of a member’s dependents. “
Insurance
money”
includes a refund of premiums and any payment of
interest on such premiums. In regards to “
pension
”,
it includes a refund of contributions and any payment of interest on
such contributions and also any payment of a gratuity
or other lump
sum by a pension or provident fund or by an employer in respect of a
person’s employment.
[5]
According to the evidence, the First Plaintiff monthly receives half
of the deceased’s monthly pension. This fact was
also conceded
by the Defendant as part of the facts to be common cause. It was
further agreed that the First Plaintiff will continue
to receive the
latter until she passes away. Prior to the deceased’s death,
the full portion payment was made to the deceased
himself which of
course he received and, in all probability used, for the support of
both Plaintiffs and more in particular First
Plaintiff as well as
himself.
[6]
After the deceased’s death half portion of the deceased’s
pension now befalls the First Plaintiff. This is indeed
an income
which befalls the First Plaintiff and indirectly also the Second
Plaintiff as a result of the death of the deceased.
In view of the
provisions of the
Assessment of Damages Act, such
pension benefit
should, however,  not be deducted from the amount to be awarded
as loss of support due to the deceased’s
death.
[7]
As part of the dispute regarding the amount to be awarded to the
Plaintiffs as loss of support due to the deceased’s death,
one
of the contested issues is the quantification of such loss and in
particular whether the income from the deceased’s estate

amounted to an accelerated benefit such that is should be regarded as
negativing or reducing the loss of the Plaintiffs.
[8]
From the liquidation account handed in as an exhibit, it appears that
the value of the immovable property situated as Gascony
Street,
Helicon Heights, Bloemfontein, is in the amount of R463 640,00.
According to the argument of
Mr. De la Ray,
appearing on
behalf of the Defendant, this value of the house should be considered
to be a so-called “
accelerated benefit”
and is
therefore to be deducted from the amount as loss of support which may
be awarded to the Plaintiffs.

The measure of
damages for loss of support is, usually, the difference between the
position of the dependent as a result of the
loss of support and the
position he or she could reasonably have expected to be in had the
deceased not died: Joubert (Ed) the
Law of South Africa (1
st
Re-issue) Vol. 7, par. 89, citing Jameson’s Miners v Central
South African Railways
1908 TS 575
at 603; Hulley v Cox
1923 AD 234
;
and Legal Insurance Co. Ltd v Botes
1963 (1) SA 608
A. The particular
equities of the case must also be taken into account and an
adjustment made where appropriate: Botes above at
614 F – H,
where Holmes JA said that the trial judge ‘has the discretion
to award what under the circumstances he thinks
right.’ Thus
any addition to the dependent’s income arising from the death
of the deceased must be deducted from the
total amount of the
loss.”
[1]
[9]
Mr. De la Ray
argued that the inheritance of the residential
property, meant that because of the First Plaintiff receiving such
inheritance, certain
debts had been paid earlier had it not been for
the receipt of such property. For that reason,
Mr. De la Ray
argued that the inheritance of the property should be regarded as
an accelerated benefit and therefore deducted from the amount of
loss
of support claimed by the Plaintiffs.
[10]
In
Lambrakis v Santam Ltd
supra
Lewis AJA (as
she then was) stated that where property is inherited by a dependent,
in determining the extent of such dependent’s
loss the court
should take into account not the value of the property but that of
the accelerated accrual.

This entails
accessing the probabilities of the dependent having inherited the
property should the deceased not have been killed
through the
wrongdoing of the defendant, but dying from a different cause at a
later date.”
[2]
[11]
In
Maasberg v Hunt ARS & Hepburn Ltd
1944 WLD the
Plaintiff had inherited, as her husband’s heiress, his half of
the joint estate. The only asset in the  joint
estate was indeed
a plot of ground, a dwelling house, and furniture half of which the
Plaintiff inherited from her husband. At
page 13 to 14 Ramsbottom J
(as he then was) said the following:

If it is
claimed that a deduction should be made for the accelerated receipt
of the inheritance, an addition must be made for the
value of the
accommodations supplied by Maasberg to the Plaintiff. I think that
the one may fairly be set-off against the other.
The answer to the
argument that she can now sell the property and use the money is I
think that, if she did so she would have to
provide herself with
accommodation elsewhere at her own expense – presumable out of
the proceeds of the sale. She has lost
the value of the accommodation
which her husband provided and whether that is compensated by the
share of the house which she had
inherited or by what she could get
for that share if she were to sell, the result is the same. No
deduction can be made on this
head.”
[12]
On the same basis it was held in
Mohan and Others v Road
Accident Fund
2008 (5) SA 305
D  that no deduction
should be made in this regard.
[13]
In this regard Nicholson J  said the following at 309 A –
B:

I was informed
that the widow, that is, the first plaintiff, and her son would live
in the matrimonial home for the foreseeable
future. I understand that
the daughter has moved out. There was, therefore, no indication that
the house as such or any part thereof
would be let out or sold to
provide some benefit that had not accrued prior to the death of the
deceased .”
and,
more importantly at 309 F – G:

The First
Plaintiff would have to rent suitable accommodation or buy a similar
house if she sold the matrimonial home.
To all intents and
purposes she is in no better a situation than she was prior to the
death of her husband. (My emphasise)
. No evidence was
directed to showing that there was any different benefit. I cannot
therefore make any deductions in this regard.”
[14]
In the present matter all indications are also to the effect that the
First Plaintiff together with her grandson will be staying
in the
home which she inherited from the deceased for the foreseeable
future. Although it may be taken  that Zane might at
some stage
move out from this property there is no indication that the First
Plaintiff will not be staying there. For that reason
also I find that
the inheritance of the house by the First Plaintiff does not
constitute an accelerated benefit and should therefore
not be
deducted from any amount awarded to the Plaintiffs as damages.
[15]
The actuarial report compiled by Messrs Munro Actuaries, calculated
on figures as at 1September 2018 contains two scenarios
in regards to
whether the age of dependency of Zane, being the grandson is to be
18, alternatively 21 years.
[16]
According to the evidence of Zane himself, he was 18 years of age
when the deceased passed away. He then did not complete his
Grade 12
at school but attended a college where he qualified as apprentice.
After qualifying as such he obtained employment for
which he earned
approximately an average of R3 600,00 per month. Before that he
also worked as a waiter ,  as many students
do, at a local
restaurant. It appears that he was the age of 20 when he obtained his
first employment.
[17]
Everything considered, it appears that although Zane did obtain his
first employment at the age of 20, he was not at that stage
yet able
to fully look after himself because as he testified, he was still as
is the position today, residing with his grandmother.
I therefore
find that on the two scenarios presented by the actuaries, the age of
dependency in regards to Zane should be 21 years.
As stated, it was
conceded by the Defendant that the deceased had a duty to support in
regards to both the Plaintiffs.  In
the words of Holmes JA:

The trial judge
has the discretion to award what under the circumstances he thinks
right.”
[18]
Therefore the following order is made:
ORDER
1. Defendant is ordered
to pay Plaintiffs the amount of R905 405,00;
2. In the event of such
damages not being paid within 14 days from the date of judgment,
interest at the rate of interest
a tempore morae,
shall be
payable;
3. Defendant is to pay
the costs of suit.
____________________________
J.J.F
HEFER, AJ
On
behalf of the Plaintiffs : Adv. D. de Kock
Instructed
by Webbers Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of Defendant: Adv. H. de la Ray
Instructed
by Maduba Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
Lambrakis v Santam Ltd
2002 (3) SA 710
SCA par 12..
[2]
P. 715, C – D.