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1984
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[1984] ZASCA 123
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De Beyer v Hart-Davis (338/82) [1984] ZASCA 123 (1 November 1984)
338/82/AV
IVAN JOSEPH DE BEYER
AND
SIDNEY JOHN HART-DAVIS
338/82/AV
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
APPELLATE
DIVISION
)
In the matter between:
IVAN JOSEPH DE
BEYER
Appellant
AND
SIDNEY JOHN
HART-DAVIS
Respondent
CORAM
: Jansen, Cillié, JJA, Wessels,
AJA
HEARD
: 22 November 1984
DELIVERED
:
JUDGMENT WESSELS, AJA
This is an appeal against the judgment of
KANNEMEYER, J., delivered in the East London Circuit Local Division,
in
2 in which appellant (defendant in the action)
was ordered,
inter alia
, to pay to respondent (plaintiff in the action)
damages in the sum of R3 527,60 to compensate him for damage caused to a Ford
Escort
motorcar as a result of a collision with a Volkswagen motorcar on 25
August 1979. Plaintiff was the driver of the Ford Escort, and
defendant that of
the Volkswagen.
The collision occurred between 19h30 and 20h00 on the evening in question.
The plaintiff was travelling on the Old Transkei Main Road
from East London
towards Beacon Bay where he then lived. In the relevant area the road runs
roughly from west to east. A road leading
from MacLeantown joins the Old
Transkei Main Road from the north.
Before
3 Before joining the Old Transkei Main Road it runs
roughly from north-east to south-west. That is, the roads do not form a
right-angled
intersection. It would also appear that at the intersection, the
MacLeantown Road is a good deal wider than it is north-east thereof.
It would
also appear that a yield-sign controls traffic entering the Old Transkei Main
Road from the MacLeantown Road. It is situated
on the pavement on the eastern
side of MacLeantown Road. White lines divide both the Old Transkei. Main Road
and the MacLeantown
Road into two separate traffic lanes.
The first witness called by the plaintiff was the 23-year old Andrew Kenneth
Allam who was a member of the South African Police from
1976 to 1980. On 25
August
1979
4
1979, while he was stationed at Beacon Bay, he was called
out to
investigate the collision. He arrived at the
scene at 8.11 p.m. His evidence
is summarised as
follows in the judgment of the Court a quo:
"He found the vehicles at the site and saw the plaintiff and defendant there.
He says neither of them was under the influence of alcohol.
He marked the
positions of the two vehicles and the plaintiff pointed out what he claimed to
be the point of impact which Allam marked
with yellow chalk. He saw glass on the
surface of the road which, he says, was mainly at the point of impact and also
in front of
the Ford and at the side of the Volkswagen. When the plaintiff
pointed out
the area in which the collision had occurred Allam says that he 'asked him to
be specific' and that the plaintiff then put his foot
down near or at a spot
where the tar of the road surface
had been repaired. The defendant was
by
5
by reason of the injuries he had received, unconscious and thus could give no
information. Allam then, having marked the relevant
spots, went to get
assistance and returned to the scene with a colleague at about 9.30 or 9.40
p.m., when he took measurements from
which he drew the police plan,
EXHIBIT
G2
and prepared the key,
EXHIBIT Gl
, the following morning.
On the following morning Allam also returned to the scene to ascertain the
number of the pole marked 'C' on his plan. He found it
to be unnumbered. He
looked for brake marks without success. He then removed glass which was still
lying on the surface of the road.
When Allam was cross-examined the main thrust was directed towards his
evidence concerning the glass on the road, based on the fact
that he had not
shown the presence of any glass on
EXHIBIT G2
. He said that, when
undergoing his training he had been taught to indicate marks on the road
and
6
and the apparent point of impact when drawing plans :but that his training
did not require him to indicate where glass lay on the
road. He said he relied
on his memory for his evidence concerning the glass on the road surface. He said
that the glass was concentrated
near the point of impact indicated by the
plaintiff - point X on
EXHIBIT
G2 - and also in front of the Ford and at
the side of the Volkswagen. The concentrated area of glass was about
three-quarters of a
metre in diameter while most of the scattered glass was
towards the southern side of the road. When he returned to the scene to take
the
measurements most of the glass in the concentrated area was still there where he
had seen it earlier and the following morning
there was still sufficient glass
in that area to have enabled him to have found the point of impact as pointed
out by the plaintiff.
It was put to him that two witnesses to be called by
the
defendant
7
defendant would testify that there was no glass on the northern
half of the road and he repeated that, apart from the area where glass
was
concentrated there was also glass in the vicinity of point A2 on
EXHIBIT
G2
(the front left side of the Ford) and on the tar on the side of the
Volkswagen and also on the southern gravel verge. He saw no glass
on the tarred
surface of the road to the west of the electricity pole marked C on
EXHIBIT
G2
. He says he found the two motor cars in the positions shown on
EXHIBIT
G2
, the Ford having its right rear portion over, and on the northern side of
the centre line. It was put to him that, if his measurements
were plotted on a
scale plan, the Ford was entirely on the southern side of the centre line - see
EXHIBIT J
- and he replied:'I seem clearly to remember it being over the
line.'"
Plaintiff, a specialist paediatrician aged about
fifty-one
8
fifty-one years, gave evidence
regarding the circumstances
which led up to the collision. He had played golf
that
afternoon and left the club for home at about 7.30 p.m.
His evidence is summarised as follows in the
judgment of the Court a
quo
:
"He was driving the Ford which he had had for about two months. There is no
street lighting in the area in which the accident occurred.
As he neared the
area he was driving at about 70 km/h. He fixes his speed by reference to the
fact that the Ford was fitted with
a speed control which he had set at 70 km/h
and, as he drove uphill towards the accident scene, he looked at his;
speedometer to
check the speed control's efficacy.
It was dark and he had the Ford's headlights on dim. He was on his correct
side of the Old Transkei Main Road as he travelled towards
the east.
As
9
As he approached the junction with the MacLeantown road he saw the lights of
a motor vehicle coming along it towards the Old Transkei
Main Road. He continued
at about 70 km/h until he realised that this vehicle - the Volkswagen -was not
slowing down. He says he disengaged
his speed control and hooted. The Volkswagen
continued towards him so he moved over to the right hand half of his side - the
northern
side -of the road. The Volkswagen approached him and he swerved to the
right and 'Slammed on my brakes'. He could not judge the speed
of the Volkswagen
but 'it was such that it could not stop'. He moved to the right half of his side
of the road as at first he expected
the Volkswagen to stop in the mouth of the
intersection. After he had swerved right and braked the collision occurred. His
impression
is that the middle of the front of his Ford came into contact with
the Volkswagen's right front bumper. At the time of the accident
the Volkswagen
was coming out of the
MacLeantown
10
MacLeantown Road and turning west towards East London."
The plaintiff was still at the scene of the collision when Allam arrived, and
he pointed out the point of impact to him. He was assisted
in pointing out a
specific spot because of a concentration of broken glass. Allam indicated this
spot as "X" on Exhibit G, a plan
prepared by him and handed in as an exhibit.
This point was slightly to the north of the white centre line on the Old
Transkei Main
Road. plaintiff was not sure whether he crossed over the centre
line of the road but, at the time, he thought that he may have done
so. The
plaintiff was asked what he would say if the defendant were to say in evidence
that he had already turned out of the MacLeantown
Road
11
Road, entered the Old Transkei Main Road and had reached a
point opposite
the gate in the pre-fab wall when he first
saw the plaintiff's motor car. He
answered: "I don't
believe it". Asked what his reaction would be to
a
suggestion that the impact occurred to the west of this gate
he
answered: "No, quite impossible . He had not
yet completed his turn; I hit
him as he came from my left". As to the situation of the afore-mentioned gate,
it appears from a plan,
handed in as an exhibit at the trial, that on the south
side of the Old Transkei Main Road and some short distance to the west of
the
intersection of that road and the MacLeantown Road there is a building referred
to as "Peter's Store". The pre-fab wall runs
in an easternly
direction
12 direction from the north-westerly corner of Peter's Store.
The gate is some 10 meters to the east of Peter's Store. The plaintiff
said that
when he saw the lights of the Volkswagen approaching along the MacLeantown Road
he moved to his right and that that was
his invariable practice. His impression
was that the defendant, who did not stop at the yield sign at the mouth of the
MacLeantown
Road, cut the corner into the Old Transkei Main Road but he could
not be adamant about this. Further cross-examined, the plaintiff
became adamant
that the Volkswagen came out from the MacLeantown Road without stopping at the
broken white line on the northern side
of the Old Transkei Main Road. He
disputed that it had so stopped while he
was
13 was still out of sight to the west. He stated if he were out of
sight at that time he would not have seen a stationary vehicle
at the broken
white line on the northern side of the Old Transkei Main Road. This
cross-examination related to evidence given by
plaintiff at a criminal trial
instituted against defendant in connection with the collision. He denied that
the Ford was swaying
from side to side and that the defendant was forced to
swing to his left in an unsec-cessful attempt to avoid the collision. He also
said that the collision took place well to the east of Peter's Store.
The defendant gave evidence at the trial and called several witnesses to
testify on his behalf. At the time of the trial defendant
was twenty-four years
old and he was
employed
14
employed by a textile mill as a maintenance fitter and
turner. On the
night in question he was at his home
in the MacLeantown Road with his fiance and a younger sister.
They decided
to drive to East London to buy refreshments.
They left in his Volkswagen, which he was driving, at about
7.40 p.m. His evidence concerning the incidents which
led up to the collision is summarised as follows in the
judgment of the Court a.
quo
:
"He says that on reaching the junction of the MacLeantown and Old Transkei
Roads which is governed by a yield sign, he stopped at
the broken white line
which can be seen in photograph B4. He remembers that while he was stationary
there his wife lowered her window
and threw out a cigarette butt. He saw no
traffic on the Old Transkei Road, into which he then drove. When
he
15
he was in the Old Transkei Road he saw the lights of a vehicle approaching at
speed from the East London side. The lights appeared
to be swaying from side to
side and then the oncoming vehicle moved over onto his side of the road. In an
unsuccessful attempt to
avoid the accident he swerved to his left. The last
thing he remembers is 'a thud'. He regained conciousness in hospital. He says
that the collision occurred between the pole Z and Peter's Store, but nearer to
the shop."
His attention was drawn to evidence given by him at the criminal trial. As to
that his evidence is summarised as follows in the judgment
of the Court a
quo
:
"He said, in the criminal trial, that when he first saw the Ford it was 40 to
50 metres from him and he confirmed this distance under
cross- examination. He
was asked why he did not see the
Ford
16
Ford earlier in view of the fact that one can see about 200 metres to the
west from the junction of the roads and he answered that
he was not 'good at
distances'. However he said that he was certain the Ford was not 200 metres from
him when he first saw it -the
most it could have been was between
80 and 90 metres. When he first saw the Ford he was travelling at about 15
km/h. He claims to have looked at his speedometer as he
was crossing over from
the MacLeantown road. He says he did not actually read his speedometer but
looked to see if his instruments
were working and noticed that his speed was
between 10 and 15 km/h. He drove a further 50 metres and then saw the Ford. He
was still
only travelling, at 15 km/h at that stage. He agreed that this was an
extraordinarily slow speed in the circumstances and said he
was accelerating
slowly and on reaching the decline to the west he would have increased his speed
to 60 km/h.
When
17
When he first saw the Ford it was on its correct side of the road and
apparently travelling normally. He cannot dispute the plaintiff's
evidence that
he (the plaintiff) was travelling at 70 km/h. From the time he first saw the
Ford up to the collision he estimates
that he travelled a further 5 metres
westward. The Ford swerved onto his side when it was about 30 metres from him.
Until then it
had been behaving normally. He then said that the Ford was
'swaying from side to side. The first thing that I noticed was that it
swayed',
but he cannot say if it crossed the centre line. He said he swerved to his left
when the Ford started to zig-zag at which
stage he must have been travelling at
about 15 km/h, but, he says, he did not look at his speedometer then. His answer
in the criminal
trial (
EXHIBIT A
page 289 line 3) to the question 'When
was the last time that you looked at your speedometer?'
'The
18
'The last time I looked at my
speedo was when I saw the other car zig-zagging'.
He agreed that the above evidence recorded in
EXHIBIT A
must be
correct as his memory of the events would then have been fresher but he cannot
say why he looked at his speedometer at that
stage. He finally said he was near
telephone pole Y at the time of the collision. As he crossed over the middle of
the Old Transkei
Road he says he looked to his right but saw no lights or glow
of lights to his right. He agreed that, at the criminal trial, he said
that the
Ford started to sway when 'it was closer than 50 metres, much closer'."
The other eye witnesses who were called by
the
defendant were his sister, Geralyn de Beyer, and
his wife.
At the time of the collision Geralyn was some 14 years old
and
in standard 6 at school. She gave a version as to
how
19 how the collision occurred. It is stated in the judgment of the
Court a
quo
that Geralyn "was a very unimpressive witness" and that her
evidence about when she saw the Ford is so contradictory as to make her
other
evidence suspect. The learned Judge a quo concluded that "no reliance can be
placed on her evidence". It appears from the judgment
of the Court a quo that
little reliance could be placed on the evidence of defendant's wife. Certain
three other witnesses, Mrs E
Botha, Mrs M Y Boshoff and Mr J J Jordaan testified
on defendant's behalf. Although they were not eyewitnesses, they arrived on the
scene shortly after the collision had occurred. In so far as Mrs Botha is
concerned, the learned Judge a quo concluded, in my opinion
justifyably
20 justifiably so, that she gave the impression of being
partisan. He stated that she did not impress him favourably. In so far as
Mrs
Boshoff is concerned, the Court a
quo
formed a far better impression of
her than in the case of Mrs Botha. However, she was only asked about the
position of glass on the
road some thirty two months after the accident. The
learned Judge a quo was satisfied on the probabilities that there was a
concentration
of broken glass at the spot marked by Allam on Exhibit G2 as the
point of impact pointed out by the plaintiff. In dealing with the
probabilities,
the judgment of the Court a quo reads as follows:
"Other probabilities also support the plaintiff. There was no reason for
any
21
any erratic 'swaying' or 'zig-zagging' by him on his incorrect side of the
road. The probabilities certainly support his evidence
that the Volkswagen
appeared to cut its corner and come into his line of travel forcing him to swing
to his right. If one accepts
point X on
EXHIBIT G2
- and as plotted on
EXHIBIT F
- as being the approximate point of impact; as I do, the
probabilities in favour of the plaintiff's version become overwhelming."
The Court a
quo
concludes:
"On the plaintiif's version there can be no doubt that the defendant was
negligent and that his negligence contributed towards the
accident. On this
version it is shown that the defendant moved from the MacLeantown road into the
Old Transkei Main Road at a time
when it was inopportune and dangerous to do so,
without regard to the approaching Ford which was travelling on the major through
road."
As
22
As to the above-mentioned findings of the Court a
quo
, I am of
the opinion that there appears to be no adequate grounds for disagreeing
therewith.
It remains to be determined whether the Court a
quo
correctly concluded that the defendant was the sole cause of the collision or
whether there was any negligence on the part of the
plaintiff which contributed
thereto.
It is necessary at the outset to refer to certain findings which the Court a
quo
made in connection with the credibility and demeanour of the
plaintiff, the defendant and some of the witnesses.
In regard to the plaintiff the learned Judge a
quo
remarked that he
appeared to be a phlegmatic type of person,
whose evidence had the ring of
truth. He was not dog
matic
23 matic in respect of points which could
have told in his favour. He told a simple straightforward story of the
Volkswagen coming
from a T-junction into his line of travel and his swerve to
the right in an attempt to avoid the collision.
As to the defendant, the
learned Judge a
quo
states that he is "a man of simple background who was
somewhat slow in the witness box". However, he stated that no adverse finding
can be made in respect of his demeanour. The learned Judge did, however, refer
to certain unsatisfactory aspects in his evidence.
They are referred to as
follows in the judgment of the Court a quo:
"It
24
"It is improbable that he would have crossed the road and started to drive
towards East London at only 15 km/h. His evidence concerning
looking at his
speedometer is unlikely. Had he stopped and looked to the right he must have
seen the plaintiff's Ford approaching
earlier than he says he did. Whether it
was 40 or 90 metres away when he saw it, he should have seen it earlier. His
estimate that
the Ford swerved to the right some 30 metres before the collision,
before which it had travelled normally on its correct side, supports
the
plaintiff's version. His suggestion - and that of his sister - that the
plaintiff zig-zagged was not put to the plaintiff in
cross-examination. It was
merely put to him that his vehicle 'was swerving' which he denied."
I have already referred to the view of the Court
a
quo
that both
defendant's wife and sister were unimpres
sive
25
sive witnesses.
On the issue of contributory negligence the o
nus
of
proof that plaintiff was also negligent and that his negligence contributed to
the collision rests on the defendant. The version
of the plaintiff as to his
approach to the junction in question is summarised as follows in the judgment of
the Court a
quo
:
"The plaintiff says he saw the lights of the Volkswagen approaching the Old
Transkei Main Road along the MacLean-town road, before
it reached the junction.
There is no reason to reject his evidence. He was, thus, keeping a proper
lookout. He was entitled to expect
the Volkswagen to give him the right of way
although, of course this did not relieve him of the duty to keep it under
general observation
and to take appropriate steps should it fail
to
26
to behave as he was entitled to expect. He says that he noticed that the
Volkswagen was not slowing so he disengaged his speed control
and hooted and
when the Volkswagen continued to come he moved somewhat to his right, thus
allowing it a wider berth in which to stop.
When he realised that the Volkswagen
would or could not stop he applied his brakes violently and swung to the
right."
The learned Judge a. quo stated the following in
his
judgment:
"The pertinent questions in this case are whether it has been shown that the
plaintiff ought to have appreciated earlier than he did
that the defendant was
not going to yield the right of way to him and, if so, whether he could have
avoided the accident had he appreciated
that the defendant was not going to stop
at that earlier time.
In
27
In my view it has not been shown that the plaintiff should have appreciated
the situation, and accordingly taken avoiding action earlier
than he did. Nor,
in my view, has it been shown that the action he took in swerving to the right
was unreasonable in the circumstances
particularly in view of the emergency
which existed and which was not of his own making."
I remain unpersuaded that the Court a
quo
erred in any manner in
dealing with and disposing of the issue of contributory negligence.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
P J WESSELS,
AJA JANSEN, JA
CILLIE, JA Concur