Tlou v Road Accident Fund (17225/2011) [2016] ZAGPPHC 31 (25 January 2016)

80 Reportability
Personal Injury Law - Road Accident Fund

Brief Summary

Damages — Road Accident Fund — Claim for general damages — Plaintiff sustained head injury in motor vehicle collision — Defendant conceded merits and agreed to settlement for loss of earnings — Court tasked with determining quantum of general damages — Expert reports presented differing views on severity of head injury — Court found that a fair and just amount for general damages was R600,000.00, taking into account the injuries sustained and comparable case law.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This matter was a delictual damages action instituted in the High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria) against the Road Accident Fund in terms of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (as amended). The plaintiff, Ms Pretty Khabo Tlou, claimed compensation arising from injuries sustained in a motor vehicle collision.


The defendant was The Road Accident Fund. Due to the plaintiff’s circumstances, Advocate A P J Bouwer was appointed as curator ad litem to represent her interests in the litigation.


The collision occurred on 26 March 2006. The action proceeded under case number 17225/2011, and the trial was heard on 5 October 2015, with judgment delivered on 25 January 2016. By the time the matter came to trial, the defendant had conceded the merits in full, and the parties had settled the claim for loss of earnings and/or earning capacity. The only outstanding issue for determination was the quantum of general damages.


The dispute therefore concerned the appropriate monetary award for non-patrimonial loss (general damages) in circumstances where expert opinions differed on the severity of the head injury and the extent to which the plaintiff’s neurocognitive sequelae were attributable to the accident.


Material Facts


On 26 March 2006 at Witbank, the plaintiff was involved in a motor vehicle collision while she was a passenger. She sustained injuries recorded by the court as including a head injury with loss of consciousness, a laceration above the right eye, an injury to the right shoulder, and soft tissue injuries to the right knee and ankle. The plaintiff was 25 years old at the time of the accident.


By the time of trial, certain matters were not in dispute. The defendant had conceded liability (merits) so that the plaintiff was entitled to 100% of her proven or agreed damages. The parties also agreed that the claim for loss of earnings or earning capacity had been settled in the amount of R375 448.00 (although the final order records a rectified amount of R375’446.00), and that the defendant would furnish an undertaking under section 17(4)(a) of the Act.


The adjudication of general damages proceeded on a defined evidentiary basis. The parties agreed that no viva voce evidence would be led, and that the expert reports in the admitted bundles would serve as the evidentiary foundation for the determination of general damages.


There was a dispute (addressed by the court) regarding the severity classification of the head injury and the causal relationship between the accident and various reported sequelae. The neurosurgeon’s report characterised the head injury as mild, whereas the clinical psychologist expressed the view that, judged by the sequelae, the plaintiff’s injury should be considered moderate to severe. The defendant also raised the point that the plaintiff had experienced learning difficulty prior to the accident, suggesting that not all cognitive sequelae could be accident-related.


The court distinguished certain complaints as not supported on the accepted medical material. It recorded that, although the plaintiff complained of epistaxis, the neurologist (Dr Landman) concluded that the epistaxis was not accident-related. The court also noted there was no medical basis in the reports for the epileptic symptoms complained of, as neither the neurosurgeon nor the neurologist mentioned such symptoms.


Notwithstanding the dispute about severity classification, the court accepted from the clinical psychologist (Ms S C Strijdom) and psychiatrist (Dr T A S Melapi) reports that the plaintiff suffered, and would continue to suffer, from severe cognitive impairment. The court further accepted that, although it could not be stated with certainty that the impairment was wholly caused by the accident, it was probable that the accident aggravated a pre-morbid cognitive impairment.


Legal Issues


The central issue was the assessment of general damages, specifically what amount would constitute a fair and adequate award for the plaintiff’s pain and suffering, disability, and loss of amenities of life, on the facts established through the expert reports.


Embedded within this assessment were questions involving the application of legal principles to medical facts and an ultimately discretionary value judgment. The court had to evaluate competing expert characterisations of the head injury’s severity (mild versus moderate-to-severe as inferred from sequelae), determine which sequelae were properly attributable to the accident, and decide the weight to be given to comparable awards in prior cases.


The matter thus did not turn on the interpretation of the statute or a pure question of law. It turned principally on the judicial discretion inherent in quantifying general damages, informed by medical evidence and comparative case guidance.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the quantification of general damages by reaffirming established principles that general damages are not susceptible to mathematical or scientific calculation. In doing so, it referred to authority recognising that the assessment is inherently difficult because there is no formula that translates pain, suffering, disability, and loss of amenities into money.


The court emphasised that it possesses a wide discretion to award what it considers fair and adequate compensation. This discretion may be guided by previous awards in comparable cases, but the court also stressed that comparators are not to be applied rigidly, because no two cases are identical and the determination requires a measure of adjudicative judgment. The assessment must also be fair to both parties, namely the plaintiff and the Road Accident Fund.


On the medical dimension, the court confronted the divergence between the neurosurgeon’s characterisation of a mild head injury and the clinical psychologist’s inference of a moderate to severe injury based on sequelae. In resolving this, the court stated it would defer to the neurosurgeon on the severity of the head injury, on the basis that the neurosurgeon was the expert “in that field”. The court also took care to identify and exclude certain complaints from contributing to the quantum where they were not shown on the accepted medical evidence to be accident-related or medically supported. It specifically recorded that epistaxis was concluded by the neurologist to be not accident related, and it found no medical basis for the asserted epileptic symptoms because they were not reflected in the neurosurgeon’s or neurologist’s reports.


At the same time, the court recognised that the reports of the clinical psychologist and psychiatrist showed that the plaintiff suffered from severe cognitive impairment that would likely continue. While acknowledging evidentiary uncertainty as to whether the cognitive impairment was wholly attributable to the accident, the court found it probable that the accident aggravated the plaintiff’s pre-morbid cognitive impairment. This probability finding, drawn from the expert materials, functioned as a key bridge between the mild head injury classification and the significant ongoing neurocognitive impact claimed.


In calibrating the award, the court considered the parties’ submissions on comparable awards. The plaintiff sought an amount in the region of R800 000.00, relying primarily on selected comparable matters. The defendant contended that the plaintiff’s asserted severity was insufficiently supported beyond the clinical psychologist’s report, and argued for a range of R300 000.00 to R350 000.00, also disputing the comparability of the plaintiff’s authorities.


The court then expressly considered additional case law, including Combrinck v Padongelukkefonds and Madan NO v Road Accident Fund, and noted that in those matters the plaintiffs sustained severe brain injuries with neurocognitive and neuropsychological sequelae “almost similar” to the plaintiff’s sequelae. The court referred to the historic awards and their “current monetary value” (as placed before it), being R413 000.00 for Combrinck and R435 000.00 for Madan. Against this landscape, and taking into account the injuries and sequelae, the expert reports filed, comparable case law, and argument, the court concluded that R600 000.00 would represent a fair and just amount for general damages.


Finally, the court recorded that the parties had prepared and agreed on a draft order subject to the court’s determination of general damages, and that the judgment amount was inserted in the order (with a minor rectification to the loss of income/earning capacity figure).


Outcome and Relief


The court made the agreed (amended) draft order an order of court and determined the outstanding general damages issue in favour of the plaintiff by awarding R600 000.00 as general damages.


The defendant was ordered to pay the plaintiff R600 000.00 for general damages and R375’446.00 for loss of income and/or earning capacity (as recorded in the order), with both sums payable into the trust account of the plaintiff’s attorneys. The order further directed the plaintiff’s attorney to pay the amounts into an interest-bearing account pending the appointment of a curator bonis, and authorised investment and the use of funds for necessary expenses on behalf of the patient.


The defendant was also ordered to furnish an undertaking in terms of section 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 to pay 100% of the plaintiff’s future medical-related costs as specified in the order, after such costs are incurred and upon proof.


As to costs, the defendant was ordered to pay the plaintiff’s party-and-party costs on the High Court scale up to the date of the order, including (as specified) costs relating to medico-legal and actuarial reports, qualifying and reservation fees (and attendances if any) for listed experts, preparation of trial bundles, counsel’s costs, and costs associated with the appointment of the curator ad litem.


The order included interest provisions at 9% per annum if the defendant failed to pay the capital amounts within 14 days, and similarly for costs if not paid within 14 days after taxation or settlement, as detailed in the order.


Cases Cited


Torres v Road Accident Fund 2010 (6A4) QOD 1 (GSJ).


Myhill obo RC Penga v Road Accident Fund 2008 (5B4) QOD 271 (T).


Smith v Road Accident Fund 2013 (6A4) QOD 188 (GNP).


Matthys v Road Accident Fund 2013 (6A4) QOD 272 (GNP).


A A Mutual Insurance Association Ltd v Maqula 1978 (1) SA 805 (A).


Road Accident Fund v Guedes 2006 (5) SA 583 (SCA).


Van Dyk v Road Accident Fund 2003 (5E8) QOD 1 (AF).


Road Accident Fund v Marunga 2003 (5) SA 165 (SCA).


Pitt v Economic Insurance Company Limited 1975 (3) SA 284 (N).


Dikoko v Mokhatla 2007 (1) BCLR 1 (CC).


Combrinck v Padongelukkefonds 2001 (5B4) QOD 81 (W).


Madan NO v Road Accident Fund 2012 (6A4) QOD 123 (GSJ).


Legislation Cited


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


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The defendant’s concession on the merits established the plaintiff’s entitlement to 100% of her proven or agreed damages. The parties’ settlement resolved the claim for loss of earnings/earning capacity and included agreement on an undertaking under section 17(4)(a) of the Road Accident Fund Act.


The only issue determined by the court was the appropriate award for general damages. Having deferred to the neurosurgeon’s classification of a mild head injury, excluded certain complaints (epistaxis as not accident-related, and epileptic symptoms as unsupported), and accepted evidence of ongoing severe cognitive impairment with probable aggravation of pre-morbid impairment, the court exercised its discretion to award R600 000.00 for general damages.


The court made an order reflecting payment of the capital amounts, delivery of the statutory undertaking, and payment of costs (including specified expert and curator-related costs), together with interest provisions for late payment.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


General damages for pain and suffering, disability, and loss of amenities are not capable of precise calculation by a formula; the assessment is inherently discretionary and evaluative, requiring the court to determine what is fair and adequate compensation on the particular facts.


In exercising the discretion to quantify general damages, a court may be guided by awards in comparable cases, but such comparisons are not mechanically applied because each case turns on its own facts and circumstances, and no two cases are identical.


The determination of general damages must be fair to both parties, requiring a balanced assessment that avoids overcompensation and undercompensation, taking into account the nature of the injuries, the sequelae, the quality and limitations of the medical evidence, and the overall impact on the claimant’s life.


Where expert opinions differ on matters within specialised domains, the court may prefer the opinion of the expert whose expertise most directly addresses the contested question (for example, deference to a neurosurgeon on the severity classification of a head injury), while still considering other expert evidence on functional sequelae and psychological impact.

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[2016] ZAGPPHC 31
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Tlou v Road Accident Fund (17225/2011) [2016] ZAGPPHC 31 (25 January 2016)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
25/01/2016
CASE NO: 17225/2011
In the matter between:
PRETTY KHABO
TLOU
Plaintiff
and
THE ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT
NONYANE, AJ:
[1]
This is an action for damages in terms of the
Road Accident Fund Act
56 of 1996
as amended (the Act), pursuant to a motor vehicle
collision that occurred on 26 March 2006 at Witbank.. Ms Pretty Khabo
Tlou, who
was a passenger when the collision occurred, sustained a
head injury with loss of consciousness, laceration above her right
eye,
injury to her right shoulder and soft tissue injury to her right
knee and ankle.
[2] At the time of the
accident Ms Pretty Khabo Tlou was 25 years old. Advocate APJ Bouwer,
was appointed as her curator ad litem.
[3] In his amended
particulars of claim the plaintiff claimed R1 000 000.00 for past and
future loss of earnings and earning capacity,
and R960 00.00 for
general damages.
[4] The defendant has
conceded the merits in full and the plaintiff is entitled to 100% of
his proven damages.
[5] At the commencement
of the trial, the parties indicated that the plaintiff's claim with
regard to loss of earnings or earning
capacity has become settled and
the parties have agreed on an amount of R375 448.00.
[6] The parties have also
agreed that the defendant will furnish the plaintiff with an
undertaking in terms of
section 17(4)(a)
of the Act.
[7] What I have to
determine is the issue of general damages. The parties further
agreed, which agreement I have endorsed, that
no viva voce evidence
would be led in respect of this claim and that the evidence and
opinions in the bundles of expert reports
be placed on record as
evidence. The agreed bundles of documents were handed in and
accordingly admitted into the records.
[8] The plaintiff's
counsel contends that the plaintiff sustained a moderate to severe
head injury which resulted in severe cognitive
and social sequelae.
The plaintiff counsel's argument was mainly based on the expert
report of Ms SC Strijdom (the clinical psychologist).
[9] With regard to the
quantum to be awarded counsel referred to the cases of:
Torres v Road Accident
Fund
2010 (6A4) QOD 1 (GSJ)
Myhill obo RC Penga v
RAF
2008 (5b4 QOD 271 (T)
Smith v RAF
2013
(6A4) QOD 188 (GNP)
Matthys v RAF
2013
(6A4) QOD 272 (GNP)
[10] In his closing
arguments, the plaintiff's counsel contended that it is common cause
that the claimant suffered a head injury
of which the
sequelae
are
similar to that of a moderate to severe head injury and in the
circumstance a fair and reasonable award for general damages
would be
in the region of R800 000.00.
[11] The defendant's
counsel contended that the severity of the claimant's head injury as
argued by her counsel is not supported
by any medical evidence except
for the report of the clinical psychologist. He further argued that
the sequelae cannot only be
accident related as the plaintiff
experienced a learning difficulty prior to the accident.
[12] The defendant's
counsel further challenged the comparable case law referred to by the
plaintiff's counsel on the basis that
the facts are not similar to
the present case. He contended that it is only in the
Matthys
case
where the sequelae are more or less similar to the present case
discounting the brain injury and the GCS scale. He concluded
that an
amount of R300 000.00 to R350 000.00 should be able to meet the
plaintiff's claim.
[13] According to the
neurosurgeon's report, Ms Tlou sustained a mild head injury. However,
the clinical psychologist is of the
view that based on the sequelae
Ms Tlou sustained a moderate to severe head injury.
[14] In as far as the
severity of the head injury is concerned I will defer to the report
of the neurosurgeon who is an expert in
that field.
[15] It is important to
note from the outset that although the plaintiff complains of
epistaxis, Dr Landman (the neurologist) concluded
that the epistaxis
is not accident related.
[16] It is also worth
mentioning that there is no medical basis supporting epileptic
symptoms that Ms Tlou complains about. Neither
the neurosurgeon nor
the neurologist reports made mention of the epileptic symptoms.
[17] It is however
evident from Ms SC Strijdom (the clinical psychologist) and Dr TAS
Melapi (the psychiatrist) reports that the
plaintiff suffers and will
continue to suffer from severe cognitive impairment.
[18] Although it cannot
be said with certainty that the cognitive impairment that the
plaintiff demonstrates is wholly as a result
of the accident, it is
probable if one considers the clinical psychologist's report that the
accident has aggravated the plaintiff's
pre-morbid cognitive
impairment.
[19] The determination of
general damage has never been an easy task as there is neither
mathematical nor scientific formula or
formulation to compute the
monetary value on pain and sufferings, loss of amenities of life and
disability. See
A A Mutual Insurance Association Ltd v Maqula
1978
(1) SA 805
(A);
Road Accident Fund v Guedes
2006 (5) SA 583
(SCA) at para [8].
[20] The court has a wide
discretion to award what it considers to be a fair and adequate
compensation to the injured. Such discretion
may be exercised with
the guidance of previous awards made in comparable cases. See
Van
Dyk v Road Accident Fund
2003 (5E8) QOD 1 (AF).
[21] It should be noted
that the use of comparable cases is not a hard and fast rule that
should be strictly applied. Two cases
can never be the same, hence
the need for judicial adjudication in cases for general damages. See
Road Accident Fund v Marunga
2003 (5) SA 165
(SCA) 169G-H.
[22] It is trite to
mention that the award of general damages must be fair to both the
plaintiff and the defendant. See
Pitt v Economic Insurance Company
Limited
1975 (3) SA 284
(N);
Dikoko v Mokhatla
2007 (1)
BCLR 1
(CC).
[23] I have, in addition
to the comparable case law stated above, also considered the
following case law:
Combrinck v
Padongelukkefonds
2001 (5b4) QOD 81
(W)
Madan NO v Road
Accident Fund
2012 (6A4) QOD 123 (GSJ)
[24]
In the aforementioned cases, the plaintiffs sustained severe brain
injuries with neurocognitive and neuropsychological sequelae
which
are almost similar to the sequelae of the plaintiff.
[25] In the case of
Combrinck
an amount of R180 000.00 was awarded as general
damages of which the current monetary value is R413 000.00. In the
case of
Madan,
an amount of R350 000.00 was awarded and the
current monetary value is R435 000.00.
[26] Taking into
consideration the injuries sustained and
sequelae
thereof, the
expert reports filed of record, the comparable case law and
arguments, I am satisfied that a fair and just amount for
general
damages suffered by the plaintiff is R600 000.00.
[27] Counsel for both
parties agreed on a draft order, subject to my determination of the
quantum on general damages. The awarded
amount is inserted in the
amended draft order with the rectification of the minor typo relating
to the amount awarded for loss
of income and/or earning capacity.
[28] Accordingly the
amended draft order attached hereto, dated, initialled and marked "X"
is made an order of this court.
_________________________
NONYANE AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Counsel for the
Plaintiff: Adv KT Bokaba
Instructed by: Gildenhuys
Malatji lncoporated
Counsel for the Defendant
: Adv R Rafedile
Instructed by Morare
Thobejane Incorporated
Date of trial 5 October
2015
Date of Judgement _
January 2016
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
BEFORE THE HONOURABLE
MADAM. R NONYANE AJ
HEARD ON THE 05
OCTOBER 2015
CASE NUMBER:
17225/2011
In the matter of:
ADV. APJ BOUWER
N.O
PLAINTIFF
o.b.o PREITY KHABO TLOU
(a major female
individual with id number: […])
and
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND                                                                                 DEFENDANT
DRAFT COURT ORDER
AFTER HEARING COUNSEL
,
and by agreement the following order is made:
1.
It is recorded that the
Defendant is ordered to be liable for 100 % of the agreed or proven
damages of the Plaintiff;
2.
2.1. The Defendant is to
pay the Plaintiff a Capital Amount of R600 000,00 (Six hundred
thousand rand only), in respect of
the Plaintiff's claim with regards
to general damages, which amount shall be paid into the trust account
of Gildenhuys Malatji
Incorporated, ABSA Bank, Brooklyn Branch,
Account Number […], Branch Code 335345 under Reference: GERIS
MAELANE/01721461;
2.2. The Defendant is to
pay the Plaintiff a Capital Amount of R375'446.00 (Three·hundred
and seventy-five thousand, four-hundred
and forty-six Rand), in
respect of the Plaintiff's claim with regards to loss of income
and/or earning capacity, which amount shall
be paid into the trust
account of Gildenhuys Malatji Incorporated, ABSA Bank, Brooklyn
Branch, Account Number […], Branch
Code 335345 under
Reference: GERIS MAELANE/01721461;
2.3. The Plaintiff's
attorney is ordered to pay the abovementioned amount into an
interest-bearing account, pending the appointment
of a
curator
bonis
for and on behalf of the patient. The Plaintiff's attorney
has the right to invest the capital amount and/or utilize the capital

amount to pay the necessary expenses and costs on behalf of the
patient.
2.4. The capital amount
shall be paid into the above-mentioned trust account of Gildenhuys
Malatji Incorporated within 14 (FOURTEEN)
days from the date of this
order;
2.5. Should the Defendant
fail to make payment of the capital within 14 (FOURTEEN) days from
the date hereof, the Defendant will
be liable for interest on the
amount due to the Plaintiff at a rate of 9% per annum, from the 15th
(FIFTEENTH) day from the date
of this order, to the date of final
payment;
2.6. The Defendant is to
deliver to the Plaintiff an Undertaking in terms of Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act No 56 of 1996
, to pay 100% of the
Plaintiff's costs of future accommodation in a hospital or nursing
home, or treatment of, or rendering of
a service or supplying of
goods to him, arising out of the injuries sustained by him on 26
March 2006 in the motor vehicle collision
aforesaid motor vehicle
accident, and to pay after such costs have been incurred and upon
proof thereof;
3.
The Defendant is ordered
to pay all the Plaintiffs attorneys costs of suit in respect of the
determination of merits and quantum
on the High Court party and party
scale up to date hereof, which costs include (but not be limited to):
3.1. The costs of
attending to the examinations and obtaining all the medico-legal-,
and actuarial reports, addendum reports, as
well as the qualifying-
and reservation fees and court attendances (if any), of specifically
(but not limited to) the following
experts:
3.1.1.
Report by Ms S C Strijdom, Clinical Psychologist:
3.1.2.
Report by Dr. S Richards, Educational Psychologist;
3.1.3.
Report by Dr. Nadir Kana, Ear, nose and throat specialist;
3.1.4.
Report by Nomsa Sibanyoni, Occupational Therapist:
3.1.5.
Report by Dr. Jaffar A Azhar, Neurosurgeon;
3.1.6.
Report by Dr. A Landman, Neurologist;
3.1.7.
Report by Dr. T Mann, Ophthalmologist;
3.1.8.
Report by David De Vlamingh, Industrial Psychologist;
3.1.9.
Report by Dr. TAS Melapi, Psychiatrist;
3.1.10.
Report by Dr. M Haffejee, Urologist;
3.1.11.
Report by Mr J Potgieter, Actuary;
3.1.12.
Report by Dr F Peters, Orthopaedic Expert.
3.1.13.
The costs of any radiologists used by the aforementioned experts.
3.2. The costs of the
preparation of 6 trial bundles as per the Directive issued by DJP W
van der Merwe and as agreed upon in the
Pre-Trial Minutes;
3.3. The costs of
counsel;
3.4. The costs and fees
of and consequent to the appointment of the
curator ad /item,
which costs and fees shall include, but not be limited to,
perusal, preparation of his report and for trial, consultation(s) and

his full day fee for 05 October 2015;
4.
Should the Defendant fail
to pay the Plaintiff's party & party costs as taxed or agreed
with 14 (fourteen) days from the date
of taxation, alternatively date
of settlement of such costs, the Defendant shall be liable to pay
interest at a rate of 9% per
annum, such costs as from and includlng
the date of taxation, alternatively the date of settlement of such
costs up to and including
the date of final payment thereof.
5.
The Plaintiff shall, in
the event that the parties are not in agreement as to the costs
referred to in paragraph 4 above, serve
the notice of taxation on the
Defendant's attorneys and shall allow the Defendant seven court days
to make payment of the taxed
costs.
6.
The Defendant shall pay
the agreed or taxed party & party costs, within the period of 14
(fourteen) days from taxation along
with all interest incurred, into
the trust account of the Plaintiff's Attorneys of Record, Messrs
Gildenhuys Malatji Inc, ABSA
Bank, Brooklyn Branch, Account Number
[…], Branch Code 335345 under Reference: GERIS
MAELANE/01721461;
BY ORDER OF THE COURT
_______________________________________
REGISTRAR OF THE HIGH
COURT PRETORIA
Obo Plaintiff
Adv. KT Bokaba (Pretoria
Bar)
Adv. APJ Bouwer
(curator
ad /item)
TEL: 012 424 4000
Obo Defendant
Adv. R Rafedile
TEL: 012 424 4000
W: 925
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
BEFORE THE HONOURABLE
MADAM. R NONYANE AJ
HEARD ON THE 05
OCTOBER 2015
CASE NUMBER: 17225/2011
In the matter of:
ADV. APJ BOUWER N.O
o.b.o PREITY KHABO TLOU
(a major female
individual with i d number:
[…])
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND                                                                                DEFENDANT
DRAFT COURT ORDER
AFTER HEARING COUNSEL
,
and by agreement the following order is made:
1.
It is recorded that the
Defendant is ordered to be liable for 100 % of the agreed or proven
damages of the Plaintiff;
2.
2.1. The Defendant is to
pay the Plaintiff a Capital Amount of R600 000, 00 (Six hundred
thousand rand only), in respect of
the Plaintiff's claim with regards
to general damages, amount shall be paid into.the trust account of
Gildenhuys Malatji Incorporated,
ABSA Bank, Brooklyn Branch, Account
Number […], Branch Code 335345 under Reference: GERIS
MAELANE/O 1721461;
2.2. The Defendant is to
pay the Plaintiff a Capital Amount of R375'446.00 (Three·
hundred and seventy-five thousand, four-hundred
and forty-six·
thousand Rand), in respect of the Plaintiff's claim with regards to
loss of income and/or earning capacity,
which amount shall be paid
into the trust account of Gildenhuys Malatji Incorporated, ABSA Bank,
Brooklyn Branch, Account Number
[…], Branch Code 335345 under
Reference: GERIS MAELANE/01721461;
2.3. The Plaintiff's
attorney is ordered to pay the abovementioned amount into an
interest-bearing account, pending the appointment
of a
curator
bonis
for and on behalf of the patient. The Plaintiff's attorney
has the right to invest the capital amount and/or utilize the capital

amount to pay the necessary expenses and costs on behalf of the
patient.
2.4. The capital amount
shall be paid into the above-mentioned trust account of Gildenhuys
Malatji Incorporated within 14 (FOURTEEN)
days from the date of this
order;
2.5. Should the Defendant
fail to make payment of the capital within 14 (FOURTEEN) days from
the date hereof, the Defendant will
be liable for interest on the
amount due to the Plaintiff at a rate of 9% per annum, from the 15
th
(FIFTEENTH) day from the date of this order, to the date of
final payment;
2.6. The Defendant is to
deliver to the Plaintiff an Undertaking in terms of
Section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act No 56 of 1996
, to pay 100% of the
Plaintiff's costs of future accommodation in a hospital or nursing
home, or treatment of, or rendering of
a service or supplying of
goods to him, arising out of the injuries sustained by him on 26
March 2006 in the motor vehicle collision
aforesaid motor vehicle
accident, and to pay after such costs have been incurred and upon
proof thereof;
3.
The Defendant is ordered
to pay all the Plaintiffs attorneys costs of suit in respect of the
determination of merits and quantum
on the High Court party and party
scale up to date hereof, which costs include (but not be limited to):
3.1. The costs of
attending to the examinations and obtaining all the medico-legal-,
and actuarial reports, addendum reports, as
well as the qualifying-
and reservation fees and court attendances (if any), of specifically
(but not limited to) the following
experts:
3.1.1.
Report by Ms S C Strijdom, Clinical Psychologist:
3.1.2.
Report by Dr. S Richards, Educational Psychologist;
3.1.3.
Report by Dr. Nadir Kana, Ear, nose and throat specialist;
3.1.4.
Report by Nomsa Sibanyoni, Occupational Therapist:
3.1.5.
Report by Dr. Jaffar A Azhar, Neurosurgeon;
3.1.6.
Report by Dr. A Landman, Neurologist;
3.1.7.
Report by Dr. T Mann, Ophthalmologist;
3.1.8.
Report by David De Vlamingh, Industrial Psychologist;
3.1.9.
Report by Dr. TAS Melapi, Psychiatrist;
3.1.10.
Report by Dr. M Haffejee, Urologist;
3.1.11.
Report by Mr J Potgieter, Actuary;
3.1.12.
Report by Dr F Peters, Orthopaedic Expert.
3.1.13.
The costs of any radiologists used by the aforementioned experts.
3.2. The costs of the
preparation of 6 trial bundles as per the Directive issued by DJP W
van der Merwe and as agreed upon in the
Pre-Trial Minutes;
3.3. The costs of
counsel;
3.4. The costs and fees
of and consequent to the appointment of the
curator ad /item,
which costs and fees shall include, but not be limited to,
perusal, preparation of his report and for trial, consultation(s) and

his full day fee for 05 October 2015;
4.
Should the Defendant fail
to pay the Plaintiff's party & party costs as taxed or agreed
with 14 (fourteen) days from the date
of taxation, alternatively date
of settlement of such costs, the Defendant shall be liable to pay
interest at a rate of 9% per
annum, such costs as from and includlng
the date of taxation, alternatively the date of settlement of such
costs up to and including
the date of final payment thereof.
5.
The Plaintiff shall, in
the event that the parties are not in agreement as to the costs
referred to in paragraph 4 above, serve
the notice of taxation on the
Defendant's attorneys and shall allow the Defendant seven court days
to make payment of the taxed
costs.
6.
The Defendant shall pay
the agreed or taxed party & party costs, within the period of 14
(fourteen) days from taxation along
with all interest incurred, into
the trust account of the Plaintiff's Attorneys of Record, Messrs
Gildenhuys Malatji Inc, ASSA
Bank, Brooklyn Branch, Account Number
[…], Branch Code 335345 under Reference: GERIS
MAELANE/01721461;
BY ORDER OF THE COURT
_______________________________________
REGISTRAR OF THE HIGH
COURT PRETORIA
Obo Plaintiff
Adv. KT Bokaba (Pretoria
Bar)
Adv. APJ Bouwer
(curator
ad /item)
TEL: 012 424 4000
Obo Defendant
Adv. R Rafedile
TEL: 012 424 4000
W: 925