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[2008] ZANCHC 58
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Nomvete v Road Accident Fund (CA&R 120/2007) [2008] ZANCHC 58 (19 September 2008)
Reportable:
YES / NO
Circulate
to Judges: YES / NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES / NO
Circulate
to Regional Magistrates: YES / NO
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern Cape
Division)
Case
Nr:
CA&R
120/2007
Case
Heard:
15/09/2008
Date
delivered:
19/09/2008
In
the matter between:
T
O Nomvete
APPELANT
and
Road
Accident Fund
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Lacock J et Olivier J
JUDGMENT
Olivier J:
The appellant, mr T O
Nomvete, instituted an action against the respondent, the Road
Accident Fund, in the magistrate’s
court, Colesberg. The
appellant claims damages on the ground that he had sustained
injuries when he was hit by a motor vehicle
driven by the insured
driver, mr Freek Afrika.
After a separation of
issues was ordered, the trial proceeded on the merits only. At the
conclusion of the appellant’s
case, and after having heard the
evidence of the appellant and of mrs F Andreas, the magistrate
granted the respondent an order
of absolution from the instance and
ordered the appellant to pay the costs on a party and party scale.
The grounds of appeal
are basically:
that
the magistrate applied the wrong test in considering and ordering
absolution from the instance; and
that
the magistrate in any event erred in coming to the conclusion that
the contradictions and discrepancies in the evidence
of the
appellant and mrs Andreas were so material as to justify such an
order.
In
his
ex
tempore
judgment the magistrate correctly stated the test to be applied in
such applications as entailing a decision “
whether
there is evidence upon which a Court applying its mind reasonably to
such evidence could or might have not should or ought
to find for
the Plaintiff
”
(see also
Superior
Court Practice
,
Erasmus, B1-292 and
De
Klerk v ABSA Bank Ltd and Others
2003 (4) SA 315
(SCA)).
The
magistrate’s remark (in his reasons in terms of magistrate’s
court rule 51(1)) that “D
ie
hof het bevind dat eiser nie sy eis op ‘n oorwig van
waarskynlikhede bewys het nie die eiser en sy getuie se getuienis
is
as ongeloofwaardig verwerp
”,
and references in his judgement to the impression made by the
appellant as a witness and to contradictions in the evidence,
create
the impression that the magistrate nevertheless may not have
properly appreciated the test to be applied.
The
magistrate was of the view that the contradictions (between the
evidence and the statements of the witnesses) regarding the
date on
which the incident had occurred was “
a
major contradiction
”.
I
disagree. It was not in dispute that an incident had occurred where
the appellant had fallen on or over bricks and that he
had sustained
injuries in the process. What was in dispute was the question
regarding what had caused the appellant to fall.
The appellant’s
version was that he had been hit by the vehicle negligently driven
by mr Afrika, while the latter’s
version was that he had
brought the vehicle to a standstill without colliding with the
appellant and that the appellant had then
fallen over the bricks
when he (Afrika) pointed his finger at the appellant.
The
issue was therefore not when the appellant had fallen, but rather
what had caused the appellant to fall.
The
same applies to the discrepancies regarding the period for which the
appellant had been hospitalised, when the appellant had
reported the
incident to the police and the direction from which the vehicle had
approached the appellant.
Although
these discrepancies and contradictions might at the conclusion of
the case, after the respondent has presented its evidence
or closed
its case, assume a different perspective and importance, they were
not in my view of such a nature as to warrant the
conclusion that
the appellant’s version was inherently unacceptable or
palpably false (see
Atlantic
Continental Assurance Co of South Africa v Vermaak
1973 (2) SA 525
(E) at 527C-D, and
Superior
Court Practice, supra
,
B1-292 to 293).
It follows that I am
of the view that the magistrate should have dismissed the
application for absolution.
There
is no reason why the costs of this appeal should not follow the
event. The fact that the respondent chose not to oppose
the appeal
is not a sufficient reason to leave the appellant to carry its own
costs. The respondent had applied for the orders
which are to be
set aside and it never abandoned the judgment of the magistrate.
The following orders
are therefore made:
The appeal succeeds
and the magistrate’s orders granting absolution from the
instance and ordering the appellant to pay
the costs on a party and
party scale are set aside and substituted with the following order:
“
The
application for absolution from the instance is dismissed.”
The matter is
remitted to the magistrate’s court, Colesberg, for further
trial.
The respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
________________________
C J OLIVIER
JUDGE
NORTHERN CAPE
DIVISION
I agree:
________________________
H J LACOCK
JUDGE
NORTHERN CAPE
DIVISION
For the
Appellant: Adv S Grobler
Instructed
by:
Du
Toit Bomela, KIMBERLEY