About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2009
>>
[2009] ZAGPJHC 98
|
|
Premier of the Gauteng Province v Carrim and Another (04/12338) [2009] ZAGPJHC 98 (1 April 2009)
SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Case No. 04/12338
Date:01/04/2009
In the matter between:
THE PREMIER OF THE GAUTENG
PROVINCE
................
Applicant/First
Defendant
and
SHABBIR
CARRIM
.................................................................
First
Respondent/Plaintiff
DR. GREGORY
BASIEWICZ
….........................
Second
Respondent/Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
MEYER, J
[1] This is an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court
of Appeal or to a Full Bench of the South Gauteng High Court
against
“two aspects of the judgment and the order” that I handed
down on the 7
th
November 2008. They are the finding that
the first defendant (applicant) is vicariously liable to the
plaintiff (first respondent)
for the negligent conduct of the second
defendant (second respondent) and the finding and order that the
first defendant must pay
30 percent of the second defendant’s
trial costs.
[2] In holding the first defendant vicariously liable, the
common-law test for vicarious liability in deviation cases as laid
down in
Minister of Police v Rabie
1986 (1) SA 117
(A) and
further developed in
K v Minister of safety and Security
[2005] ZACC 8
;
2005
(6) SA 419
(CC) has been applied to the facts of this case in the
light of the spirit, purport and objects of the Constitution. The
first
defendant’s contention that I “failed to appreciate
that the usual enquiry would not suffice in this case” and
its
contentions relating to the plaintiff’s “state of mind”
and his “belief or awareness” is premised
on its reliance
on an alleged “private arrangement” between the plaintiff
and the second defendant, which arrangement
was rejected in my
judgment insofar as the plaintiff’s retroperitoneal surgery and
his admission to the Chris Hani Baragwanath
Hospital from 20 –
27 May 2002 is concerned. The facts and probabilities relevant to
the rejection thereof are extensively
dealt with in my judgment and
no purpose will be served in repeating them.
[3] There is, in my view, no reasonable prospect that another Court
might come to a different conclusion on the aspect of vicarious
liability or the findings made in arriving at such conclusion.
[4] I now turn to the grounds raised by the first defendant in
support of its application for leave to appeal against the costs
order.
[5] The first ground raised is that having regard to the formal
complaints made by the plaintiff about the arrangement between
him
and the second defendant, the first defendant had a public duty to
oppose the plaintiff’s claim of vicarious liability.
The
alleged ‘arrangement’ between the plaintiff and the
second defendant, if it existed, could at best for the first
defendant only have tainted the plaintiff’s first admission to
the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital during the period 1 –
4 May
2002 for the purpose of the radical orchiectomy. The delictual acts
for which liability was claimed, however, related to
the plaintiff’s
retroperitoneal surgery and his admission to the Chris Hani
Baragwanath Hospital from 20 – 27 May 2007
when the second
defendant acted within the course and scope of his employment and
duties with the first defendant in the treatment
that he had given to
the plaintiff and in performing the retroperitoneal surgery on the
plaintiff.
[6] The second ground raised is to the effect that the conduct of the
second defendant in abusing his position to unfairly secure
benefits
for himself and the plaintiff ought to have been taken into account
in considering the award of costs. Any benefit that
the second
defendant secured for himself, at best for the first defendant, could
only have related to the plaintiff’s first
admission to the
Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital during the period 1 – 4 May
2002 for the purpose of the radical orchiectomy.
In recommending and
performing the retroperitoneal surgery on 21 May 2002, the second
defendant’s subjective intention was
not self-directed. He
intended to serve the interests of the plaintiff alone.
[7] The third ground raised is that the first defendant was not given
an opportunity to deal with the question of the costs of
the second
defendant. If this was indeed the position, then it was open to the
first defendant, once it ascertained that it had
been ordered to pay
30 percent of the second defendant’s trial costs, to apply to
be heard on the issue of costs if it maintained
that it had not been
heard thereon. In
Union Government v Gass
1959 (4) SA 401
(A), at p 412 F – G, it was held:
“For when a Court, without first hearing a party therein,
awards costs against him, such award is always made upon the implied
understanding that it is open to the mulcted party, or his counsel,
to apply, within a reasonable time, to be heard on the issue
of costs
(see
Estate Garlick v C.I.R.,
1934 A.D. 499
and especially at
pp. 503 and 505).”
See also:
Hart v Broadacres Investments
Ltd
1978 (2) SA 47
(NPD), at pp 49H – 50B. No such application was made by or on
behalf of the first defendant in this case.
[8] I am unable to find that the first defendant has reasonable
prospects of success on appeal against the award of costs that
has
been made against it.
[9] In the result, the following order is made:
The first defendant’s application for leave to appeal is
refused.
The first defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs of
opposing the application for leave to appeal, including
the costs
consequent upon the employment of senior counsel.
The first defendant is ordered to pay the second defendant’s
costs of opposing the application for leave to appeal.
P.A.
MEYER
JUDGE OF
THE HIGH COURT
1 April 2009.