SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document
in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NUMBER: 22528/2018
In the matter between
ADVOCATE A J DU TOIT
obo A[…] B[…] J[…] PLAINTIFF
And
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND DEFENDANT
Date of hearing: 29,30 July 2024
Date of judgment: 1 August 2024
JUDGMENT
BHOOPCHAND AJ:
1. Plaintiff Advocate is the Curator Ad Litem for patient A[...] B[...] J[...]. The
Patient, born on March 24, 2008, is sixteen. He was involved in a road accident while
riding his bicycle in Lavender Hill on 8 March 2017. The Patient was almost nine
years of age when he was involved in the accident.
2. The Patient suffered injuries to his head, which included an occipital skull
fracture and bruising over his clavicle. A neurosurgical assessment revealed that the
Patient sustained a mild traumatic brain injury. The CT scans revealed evidence of
structural brain injury with bifrontal haemorrhagic contusions and an interhemispheric
haematoma. Structural brain injury of the nature sustained by the Patient would
usually imply a more severe type of intracranial injury associated with long -term
sequelae. The Patient required a three -day hospital stay for observations. He was
diagnosed with post-head injury syndrome a month after the accident and was
referred to the neurodevelopmental and behavioural clinics.
3. The Patient recovered physically from the head injury and has no residual
focal neurological deficits. The latter means that he has not suffered, among others,
any strokes, limb coordination problems or eye, ear, or throat deficits that a physical
neurological examination can identify. The Patient has chronic sequelae relating to
cognition and behaviour. Neuropsychological assessment reve aled a significant
discrepancy between verbal and non -verbal scaled scores, poor working memory
skills, slow processing speed, distractibility, impulsivity, and problems with auditory
sequential memory.
4. Additionally, the Patient has disabling concentration, which was amenable to a
one-on-one, distraction -free environment. He has poor attention , which affects his
learning. He has deficits relating to the laying down of verbal memory and
processing speed.
5. The Parties had settled the claim for general damages. The only claim
remaining to be determined is the claim for future loss of earning capacity. When the
matter came to be heard, the parties had reached an agreement on all outstanding
aspects relating to the basis for the loss, inc luding the computation of that loss . The
joint minutes incorporating agreements between the educational psychologists and
industrial psychologists effectively ended any di fference in the opinions of the
experts appointed by the parties and any differences between the parties on the
computation of the Patient’s future loss of earning capacity.
6. The court was presented with an actuarial calculation of earning capacity and
informed that its only role was to determine the contingency adjustment that had to
apply to the uninjured earning capacity to determine the future loss of earnings.
7. The uninjured earning capacity amounted to R6 384 400. The submission
made on behalf of the Plaintiff was that a 15% deduction should apply. The Patient
would have begun earning an income from age 21 in 2029. He would have had a
career path spanning 44 years to retirement. The court indicated that a sliding scale
of ½ per cent per year of employment for the Patient commencing employment to
retirement should apply. The Supreme Court of Appeal in Road Accident Fund v
Guedes endorsed the sliding scale applicable to general contingency adjustments as
a guideline in applying general contingencies to future earnings to determine the loss
of earnings. The response on behalf of the Patient was that a 20% deduction would
be appropriate.
8. The Defendant suggested that the court apply a thirty per cent deduction and
raised the issue of the Patient’s academic performance before the accident. The
court notes that the Educational Psycholog ists did not distinguish themselves in one
crucial respect. They failed to access the Patient’s school reports. It took an effort on
the part of the Speech Therapist to bring that record to the fore and to identify that
the Patient was a vulnerable learner before the accident.
9. It is unclear whether the Patient was repeating grade 2 in the year of the
accident or had attempted grade 3 and failed. We have a record of two years of
education before the accident. The experts were eventually in agreement that the
Patient was a vulnerable learner before the accident occurred. Despite the latter,
they ultimately agreed that the Patient would have obtained a vocational or skills -
based matric pass and progressed to obtain a technical and vocational college
education to enable him to become an artisan. It was argued on behalf of the Plaintiff
that all the Patient required was an NQF level 1 with a grade 9 pass to become an
artisan, meaning that a matric pass was not essentia l for the Patient to pursue and
become an artisan like a boilermaker.
10. The joint minute of the experts , which is material to the determination of
earnings and loss of earning capacity, defines the issues for trial .1 The
disagreements between these exper ts were minimal on the first scheduled trial date
and resolved by the morning of the se cond day. The Defendant raised the issue of
new material that had come to light in their application for a postponement on the
first day of the trial. The court deals with this aspect later in the judgment.
11. A delictual claim for earnings is premised upon a complex interplay of the
claimant’s history, the circumstances concurrent with the injury -causing event, the
circumstances at the time of deliberation, and an exercise of foresight into the future.
As fraught as the latter is with uncertainty, it must be harnessed to do justice to a
worthy claim. The Actuary uses, among other means, mortality tables, interest rates,
rates of inflation, consumer price indices and the ne t discount rate to compute the
current capital value of earnings based upon a set of assumptions provided by the
instructing party or discerned from the relevant expert reports. The days of making
rough estimates involving judicial guesswork or manual arit hmetical calculations in
personal injury matters have largely dissipated into the annals of our jurisprudence.2
12. “Contingencies could be defined as uncertain circumstances of a positive or
negative nature which, independent of the defendant's conduct and if they should
realise, would probably influence a person's health, income, earning capacity, quality
of life, life expectancy or dependency on support in fut ure or could have done so in
the past. These "uncertain" circumstances must consequently be taken into account
in a fair and realistic manner by increasing or decreasing the plaintiff's damages
during the quantification process. If the relevance of a posit ive contingency is
proved, it will increase the amount of damages to be awarded, and if the relevance
1 Bee v Road Accident Fund 2018 (4) 366 (SCA) at para 64 et seq
2 There are notable exceptions e.g., Hlalele Obo Hlalele v Road Accident Fund (41304/2013) [2015]
ZAGPJHC 54 (26 March 2015) where the court awarded a lumpsum amount thereby disregarding the
actuarial calculation of loss of earning capacity.
of a negative contingency is proved, it will decrease the amount of damages to be
awarded.”3
13. Once the Actuary has computed the earnings, it is left to the parties among
themselves or the court to make a general contingency adjustment for which the
Actuary has made no explicit allowance before determining the loss suffered by the
injured party. General contingency adjustments range from a deduction of 5% to past
earnings and 15% to future earnings, 25% for a child, 20% for youth, and 10% for
middle age. 4 The sliding scale of ½ per cent per year of employment capacity
throughout a wor king life is a more accurate reflection of the level of general
contingencies that need to apply for longer working years. Exceptional
circumstances peculiar to a case may warrant a specific or special contingency
adjustment, which may decrease or increase the percentage of general adjustment
for contingencies. Ultimately, and when called upon, the court exercises a n informed
discretion to determine what is fair when applying contingency adjustments to
calculated earnings.
14. The Defendant contends for a specific contingency deduction over and above
the 22 percent deduction that would apply in this case. The defendant argue d that
the extent of the Patient's educational vulnerability before the accident only became
apparent once the defendant -appointed Educational Psychologist accessed the
Patient’s school reports. The latter is incorrect, as the experts who read the Speech
Therapist's report would have been aware of the uncertainty relating to the Patient’s
schooling before the accident. The Speech therapist's report was completed
sometime in 2021. The Defendant-appointed Educational Psychologist commented
on a fuller set of school reports on the eve of the scheduled trial. The Patient’s
educational vulnerability had already been identified before then and factored into
the actuarial assumptions.
15. In the circumstances, the court is not persuaded that a contingency deduction
beyond 22 per cent applied to uninjured earning capacity is justified in determining
3 Steynberg L, "Fair" mathematics in assessing delictual damages,
PER vol.14 n.2 Potchefstroom Jan. 2011 http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/pelj.v14i2.1
4 Robert Koch, Quantum Yearbook 2024 at page 125
the Patient’s loss of earnings in the injured state. As the upper guardian of children,
the court is satisfied that the Patient’s best interests have been served by how his
claim for future loss of earning capacity has been quantified.
16. This court will not perpetuate past patterns of exclusion and poverty in
justifying higher general contingency deductions or making further specific
adjustments for children attending township public schools unless objective evidence
is provided to support contentions of this nature. The con stitutional order and the
explosion in career choices and job opportunities have introduced new dynamics in
predicting the unforesee able future for children from disadvantaged backgrounds . A
disadvantaged school child has a greater chance to rise above adversity, select from
expanded career choices and live a satisfying existence. One needs to look around
and note the emergence and growth of a bourgeoning middle class in our society ,
many of whom have blossomed despite a township education. 5
17. The Plaintiff has been substantially successful, and there is no reason why he
should not be entitled to his costs. The following orders are premised upon the
agreed-upon draft order between the parties.
IT IS ORDERED THAT
THE CAPITAL
1. The Defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff’s attorneys the sum of R4 979 832
(four million, nine hundred and seventy -nine thousand, eight hundred and thirty-two
rand) in respect of Patient A[...] B[...] J[...]’ future loss of earnings (“the capital sum”)
in the manner and on the date set out in paragraph 3 hereunder.
PAYMENT PROVISIONS
5 See for example the thought-provoking paper by E Zitzke: Transforming a child’s claim for loss of
earning capacity , De Jure Law Journal, 2023 , pages 646 -667, http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/2225-
7160/2023/v56a37
2. Defendant shall pay the capital amount referred to above within 180 calendar
days from the date hereof, which shall be effected by electronic transfer into the trust
banking account of Plaintiff’s attorney, details of which are listed below.
3. Defendant will be liable for interest on the capital amount at the applicable
interest rate from 180 calendar days from the date hereof to the date of final
payment.
4. The Defendant shall not be liable for interest on the capital amount timeously
paid.
COSTS
5. The Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff’s taxed or agreed costs on the High
Court scale as between party and party, including for clarity, but not limited to the
costs set out hereunder.
6. If costs are not agreed upon, the Plaintiff agrees to serve the notice of
taxation on the Defendant and allows the Defendant to make payment of the taxed
costs within 180 calendar days of taxation/settlement.
7. Defendant will be liable for i nterest on the taxed or agreed party and party
costs at the applicable interest rate from 180 calendar days of the date of
taxation/settlement to the date of final payment.
8. Defendant shall not be liable for interest on the amount of timeously paid
costs.
9. The plaintiff will not be allowed to proceed with a warrant of execution
regarding the capital and costs before the expiry of the 180-day periods referred to in
paragraphs 2 and 6 above.
GENERAL COSTS
10. The Defendant shall pay the taxed or agreed costs i ncurred and any costs
incurred attendant upon obtaining payment of the capital amount and costs.
EXPERT WITNESSES
11. Regarding the expert witnesses listed hereinbelow (“the experts”), the
Defendant shall pay the taxed or agreed party and party costs of such e xperts,
including the costs attached to the procurement of the reports prepared by these
witnesses and the preparation of their reports and the necessary consultations with
the Plaintiff’s Counsel and attorney. The reservation fees , as well as the fees
attendant upon any of the experts having to qualify themselves to testify, shall be
subject to the discretion of the Taxing Master. The experts mentioned above are as
follows –
a) Dr Domingo, Neurosurgeon;
b) Dr D Ogilvy, Speech and Language Therapist;
c) Prof T Zabow, Psychiatrist;
d) Ms E Burke, Clinical Psychologist;
e) Ms D Lopes, Educational Psychologist;
f) Ms K Kotze, Industrial Psychologist; and
g) Munro Forensic Actuaries, Actuary.
COUNSEL
12. Pay the taxed or agreed fees of the Plaintiff’s counsel (Scale C), which shall
include Counsel’s day fees for the trial on 29 and 30 July 2024.
TRAVELLING COSTS:
13. Pay the taxed or agreed travelling and related costs incurred as follows:
13.1 In respect of A[...] and his mother travelling to attend medico -legal
examinations with expert witnesses for the Plaintiff and Defendant, as well as
for purposes of attending consultations with the Plaintiff’s legal
representatives;
13.2 Concerning the flights and accommodation of Karen Kotze, the
Plaintiff-appointed industrial psychologist, who had to travel to Cape Town to
testify at the trial,
COSTS OF A CURATOR BONIS
4. In the event of a Curator Bonis / Trust being appointed to manage the
Patient’s affairs, the Defendant shall pay the costs of the Curator Bonis / Trust , as
taxed or agreed, such costs including for the sake of clarity, but not limited to:
14.1. The costs of the application to appoint the Curator Bonis / Trust on the
High Court scale as between party and party, as taxed or agreed, plus VAT;
14.2. The costs, if any, incurred by the Curator Bonis / Trust in furnishing
security to the Master;
14.3. The fees and costs of the Curator Bonis / Trust for administering the
capital and the undertaking.
ACCOUNT DETAILS
5. The plaintiff’s attorneys’ trust banking account details are as follows:
Bank: FNB BUSINESS
Account Holder: De Vries Shields Chiat Inc.
Branch: Portside
Account Number: 6[…]
Branch Code: 210651
CONTINGENCY FEE AGREEMENT:
16. It is recorded that the Plaintiff entered into a Contingency Fee Agreement
which complies with the relevant Act.
Ajay Bhoopchand
Acting Judge of the High Court
Western Cape Division
01 August 2024
Plaintiff’s Counsel: W Coughlan
Instructed by DSC Attorneys (Per J Hudson)
Defendant’s Counsel: R Abrahams
Instructed by the State Attorney (Per M Mothilal)