IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CAPE DIVISION, MAKHANDA)
CASE NO.: CA 42 /2024
In the matter between:
SCHOL PROPERTY AND CONSULTING Appellant
and
KAWSHLIA GAJJAR Respondent
JUDGMENT
TOKOTA J
Introduction
[1] The appellant (hereafter referred to as the defendant) is the owner of
Sunridge Village shopping mall, Gqeberha. The respondent (hereinafter referred to
as the plaintiff) instituted a civil claim against the defendant for damages arising from
the alleged negligent conduct of the defendant relating to the maintenance of its
shopping mall. At the commencement of the proceedings the trial court granted an
order separating the merits from quantum in terms of Rule 33(4) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The trial Court held that the defendant was negligent and therefore
liable for such damages as may be proved by the plaintiff. With the leave of the
Supreme Court of Appeal, the defendant now appeals to this Court.
Factual Matrix
[2] The facts giving rise to the claim are to a large extent not in dispute and can
be summarized as follows: In the afternoon of the 9th of April 2021 the plaintiff
together with her daughter visited Sunridge Village shopping mall with a view to have
dinner at San Fernando’s restaurant. Upon their arrival at the mall, they parked their
vehicle at the parking lot and proceeded to the entrance which was near the San
Fernando’s restaurant on the side of Woolworths. Before going to San Fernando’s
restaurant they went to a shop called Mary’s to buy desserts which they would take
home.
[3] After buying whatever they wanted at Mary’s they were on their way to San
Fernando’s restaurant. The plaintiff’s daughter was walking in front of her. The
walkway in the mall is partly covered and consists of two types of paving bricks. The
uncovered part has been paved with charcoal grey pavers. There is also what is
called terracotta (red pavers) coloured paving bricks on the area under cover. The
red floor surface is elevated and the charcoal grey floor surface is a little bit lower.
There is a white line that has been painted on the charcoal grey pavers at the edge
of the raised level caused by the curb stone.
[4] Whilst on their way to San Fernando’s restaurant the plaintiff stumbled,
tripped and fell on the uneven floor. She was injured on her shoulder and
subsequently underwent an operation in hospital. It was this incident which gave rise
to the claim.
[5] The defendant called Mr Du Preez, an expert witness in civil engineering, who
testified that the reason for the uneven floors was for the management of water flow
towards the intake grids for the stormwater that runs off from the grey area. It was
created to prevent the water that is running off from the non-covered area from
flowing onto the walkways under the cover where people walk when it is raining. He
testified further that the purpose of the white line was ‘to attract attention of the
raised level and the difference in level as you come from a lower level up to a higher
level.’
The issue for determination:
[6] The issue for determination was whether or not the defendant, as the owner
of the mall, took sufficient reasonable precautions to prevent the potential danger
created by the uneven floors. It is common cause that it owed a duty of care to the
members of the public entering the mall to ensure their safety. It was submitted on
behalf of the defendant that precautionary steps were indeed taken to ensure the
safety of the patrons by means of demarcating the elevation with a white line to warn
them of the potential hazard caused by the elevation.
Parties’ submissions:
[7] Counsel for the defendant submitted that the demarcation by means of a
white line constituted a sufficient warning of the potential hazard caused by the
uneven floors. The plaintiff, so it was contended, in fact, noticed the elevation caused
by the curb stones. It was contended that the fact that the demarcation was by
means of a white line was immaterial. By noticing the curb, so the argument went, it
was incumbent upon the plaintiff to avoid the potential danger. She failed to do so.
Once she noticed the white line she ought to have changed her direction towards the
end of the white line where there was virtually no elevation.
[8] It was submitted that the trial court erred in finding that the white line fell short
of adequate warning for the safety of the patrons purely on the basis that the white
line was clearly visible from a distance. It was submitted that the fact that the plaintiff
only noticed it at the last moment meant that she did not keep a proper lookout and
did not have regard for her own safety.
[9] I pause here to mention that during the hearing of the matter on appeal I
posed a question to counsel for the defendant whether a white line is normally used
to indicate a danger and he conceded, quite properly in my view, that it is not
normally used as an indication of danger.
[10] Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that a reasonable person in the position of
the defendant would not imagine that the patrons whose attention was not on the
floor, would timeously associate the white line with the danger presented by the
raised floor ahead of them. He contended that it would neither be onerous nor
expensive for the defendant to put up a sign expressly warning the members of the
public of the presence of the raised floor. Accordingly, the trial court correctly found
that the defendant failed to take reasonable steps to warn the pedestrians of the
inherent danger created by the raised surface.
Discussion:
[11] Under cross-examination on behalf of the defendant during the trial it was put
to the plaintiff thus:
“MR VAN DER MERWE: Now you have already indicated that there is a white
line. What would you say was the purpose of that white line?
MS GAJJAR: Well, it did not show me danger. It did not say mind the step or
something like that or a red one to alert me there is a problem here
(indistinct)”.
[12] The defendant led no factual evidence explaining the reason why no further
steps were taken, other than drawing the white line, to warn the patrons of the
potential hazard. Except for the assumption by Mr Du Preez, no factual evidence
was led by the defendant as to why the white line was regarded as a sufficient
warning of the impending hazard. The defendant also led no factual evidence, to
explain the purpose of the white line. The evidence of the expert was based on the
assumption that the white line was meant to be a warning of danger to the patrons.
[13] The function of an expert is to give an opinion on the facts, and, sometimes
supported by documents, given to him by the client. He must then draw inferences
from those facts and documentation. The reasonableness or otherwise of drawing
inferences from such facts in support of the opinion can only be determined once the
plaintiff’s evidence has been tested.
[14] In AM v MEC for Health1 Wallis JA described the functions of an expert
witness in the following terms:
“The functions of an expert witness are threefold. First, where they have
themselves observed relevant facts that evidence will be evidence of fact and
admissible as such. Second, they provide the court with abstract or general
knowledge concerning their discipline that is necessary to enable the court to
understand the issues arising in the litigation. This includes evidence of the
current state of knowledge and generally accepted practice in the field in
question. Although such evidence can only be given by an expert qualified in
the relevant field, it remains, at the end of the day, essentially evidence of fact
on which the court will have to make factual findings. It is necessary to enable
the court to assess the validity of opinions that they express. Third, they give
evidence concerning their own inferences and opinions on the issues in the
case and the grounds for drawing those inferences and expressing those
conclusions.” [Footnotes omitted.]
[15] The Learned Judge continued and said: ‘The need for clarity as to the facts on
which an expert's opinion is based has been stressed in several cases. In Price
Waterhouse Coopers v National Potato Co-operative Ltd, the following passage from
a Canadian judgment was cited with approval:
“Before any weight can be given to an expert's opinion, the facts upon which
the opinion is based must be found to exist. As long as there is some
admissible evidence on which the expert's testimony is based it cannot be
ignored; but it follows that the more an expert relies on facts not in evidence,
the weight given to his opinion will diminish. An opinion based on facts not in
evidence has no value for the Court.’ [Emphasis added]
[16] The learned Judge of Appeal stated further: ‘The opinions of expert witnesses
involve the drawing of inferences from facts. The inferences must be reasonably
capable of being drawn from those facts. If they are tenuous, or far-fetched, they
1 AM and Another v MEC for Health, Western Cape 2021 (3) SA 337 (SCA) at para 17.
cannot form the foundation for the court to make any finding of fact. Furthermore, in
any process of reasoning the drawing of inferences from the facts must be based on
admitted or proven facts and not matters of speculation. As Lord Wright said in his
speech in Caswell v Powell Duffryn Associated Collieries Ltd:
“Inference must be carefully distinguished from conjecture or speculation.
There can be no inference unless there are objective facts from which to infer
the other facts which it is sought to establish. . .. But if there are no positive
proved facts from which the inference can be made, the method of inference
fails and what is left is mere speculation or conjecture.’2 [Footnotes omitted]
17] The Learned Judge continued and said:
‘Where the facts are central to the opinions of the experts, courts should
require that those facts be led in evidence before the experts express their
opinions. Primarily that is for the benefit of the court, which is thereby placed
in a position where the expert's opinion can be assessed, and, if need be,
queried or elucidated, in the light of the factual material before it. It is also
conducive to fairness in cross-examination of the experts on behalf of the
defendants. Where the case comes on appeal it facilitates a reading of the
record. Lastly, if this principle is borne in mind and objections are upheld to
leading the expert evidence without a proper factual foundation being laid,
that should avoid situations, such as that in Madikane, where the case was
conducted entirely on the basis of expert evidence without any factual
foundation at all for the opinions being expressed.’3 [Emphasis is mine]
[18] Here we have the opinion evidence by Mr Du Preez without the benefit of the
factual version of the defendant or its employees. Counsel for the plaintiff, during
oral argument, submitted, quite correctly in my view, that the defendant ought to
have testified to explain the presence of the white line and why it was difficult to put
up signs warning the patrons of the potential hazard.
2 Ibid paras.20-21; HAL obo MML v MEC for Health , FS 2022 (3) SA 571 (SCA) ([2021] ZASCA 149)
paras.212-213.
3 At para.215
[19] Mr Du Preez was asked about his experience in other malls. His response
was ‘As an engineer what I am also involved in [is] large road projects. The majority
of the lines are painted in white
MR VAN DER MERWE: What would be the reason for that?
MR DU PREEZ: It is purely for visibility.”If the defendant had presented
testimony maybe it would have been explained further that the purpose was to
alert patrons of the danger not just “purely for visibility”. Later the following
question by defendant’s counsel to Mr Du Preez appears on record:
‘MR VAN DER MERWE: In your view Mr Du Preez what is the purpose of the
white line?
MR DU PREEZ: The purpose of the white line as it [is] painted there is to
attract attention of the raised level and the difference in level as you come
from a lower level up to a higher level.’
Under cross-examination, the following appears:
MR NIEKERK: …But to take it one step further the pedestrian entering that
mall for the first time in her life is not going to associate different colour paving
bricks with different levels. Will she?
MR DU PREEZ: No.’
[20] Mr Du Preez also conceded that the defendant had a duty to make sure that
the danger was clearly visible to people, impliedly conceding that the uneven floors
constituted a danger to the public.
Furthermore, I am not really sure that the testimony of Mr Du Preez qualified as
expert evidence. The so-called expert evidence did not establish the cogency of the
concept of a white line nor did it establish the technical integrity of the process.
Experts often give evidence by drawing inferences from the facts and the inferences
drawn must be reasonable to exclude other inferences. In addition, he conceded that
when he explained the purpose of the white line his explanation was not based on
his expertise as an engineer since there is no provision for that in the building
regulations but his was to simply state that it was painted to make people aware of
the raised level.
[21] In Price Waterhouse Coopers Inc & others v National Potato Co-operative Ltd
& another4 the following was stated concerning the purpose and role of expert
witnesses:
‘[98] Courts in this and other jurisdictions have experienced problems with
expert witnesses, sometimes unflatteringly described as ‘hired guns’. In The
Ikarian Reefer5Cresswell J set out certain duties that an expert witness should
observe when giving evidence. Pertinent to the evidence of Mr Collett in this
case are the following: The duties and responsibilities of expert witnesses in
civil cases include the following:
1. Expert evidence presented to the Court should be and should be seen
to be the independent product of the expert uninfluenced as to form or content
by the exigencies of litigation …
2. An expert witness should provide independent assistance to the Court
by way of objective unbiased opinion in relation to matters within his expertise
… An expert witness in the High Court should never assume the role of
advocate.
3. An expert witness should state the facts or assumptions on which his
opinion is based. He should not omit to consider material facts which detract
from his concluded opinion. . ..
4. An expert witness should make it clear when a particular question or
issue falls outside his expertise.’ These principles echo the point made by
Diemont JA in Stock6 that:
4 (451/12) [2015] ZASCA 2 (4 March 2015) at para 98.
5 National Justice Compania Naviera SA v Prudential Assurance Co Ltd ('The Ikarian Reefer') [1993]
2 Lloyd's Rep 68 [QB (Com Ct)] at 81 – 82. Approved in Pasquale Della Gatta, MV; MV Filippo
Lembo; Imperial Marine Co v Deiulemar Compagnia Di Navigazione Spa 2012 (1) SA 58 (SCA) at
para 27, fn 12 and Schneider NO and Another v AA and Another 2010 (5) SA 203 (WCC) at 211E-I.
6 Stock v Stock 1981 (3) SA 1280 (A) at 1296 E -G. See also Jacobs and Another v Transnet Ltd t/a
Metrorail and Another 2015 (1) SA 139 (SCA) at para 15.
‘An expert … must be made to understand that he is there to assist the
Court. If he is to be helpful he must be neutral. The evidence of such a
witness is of little value where he, or she, is partisan and consistently
asserts the cause of the party who calls him. I may add that when it
comes to assessing the credibility of such a witness, this Court can test
his reasoning and is accordingly to that extent in as good a position as
the trial Court was.’
[22] The above principles apply even where the Court is presented with the
evidence of only one expert witness on a disputed fact. A white line is commonly
found on the roads indicating the point at which the traffic should stop or where the
traffic should not encroach such on a barrier line. In most, if not all, cases there is an
additional sign indicating what danger lies ahead, for instance, a controlled
intersection by means of robots or a stop sign, a sign for speed humps etc.
[23] The leading case on the formulation of the test for negligence is Kruger v
Coetzee 1966 (2) SA 428 (A) at 430E where it was held that.
‘For the purpose of liability, culpa arises if –
(a) A diligens paterfamilias in the position of the defendant –
(i) would foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring
another in his person or property and causing him patrimonial
loss; and
(ii) would take reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence;
and
(b) the defendant failed to take such steps.’
[24] The legal convictions of the community require that where the defendant had
knowledge of the danger posed by the uneven floors, the failure to warn members of
the public within a reasonable time, resulting in possible injury to any member of the
public, would be wrongful. In this regard, a legal duty would only arise where there
was prior positive conduct. ‘A duty may arise where the defendant has by lawful prior
positive conduct (commissio) created a potential risk of harm to others. If the
defendant then omits to take reasonable steps to prevent the risk from materialising
(ommissio) the duty is breached7. The prior conduct of the defendant in the present
‘atter was the construction of uneven floors at the mall which created a potential risk
of harm to patrons.
[25] n Pretoria City Council v De Jager8 the following was stated:
‘The Council was obliged to take no more than reasonable steps to guard
against foreseeable harm to the public. Whether in any particular case the
steps actually taken are to be regarded as reasonable or not depends upon a
consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the case. It follows that
merely because the harm which was foreseeable did eventuate does not
mean that the steps taken were necessarily unreasonable. Ultimately the
inquiry involves a value judgment.’
[26] However, negligence is not necessarily regarded as prima facie wrongful. In
Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden,9 it was held that negligence is
unlawful, and thus actionable, only if it occurs ‘in circumstances that the law regards
as sufficient to give rise to a legal duty to avoid negligently causing harm’. Where the
negligence manifests itself in a positive act that causes physical harm it is presumed
to be unlawful.
[27] The plaintiff bears the onus of proving such negligence on a balance of
probabilities. In some situations, where the plaintiff is not in a position to produce
evidence on a particular aspect, the evidential burden is placed on the defendant to
demonstrate what steps it had taken to comply with the standards to be expected. In
such a case less evidence showing a prima facie case might suffice if the matter is
7 See JP Midgley & JC Van der Walt “Delict” 2 Lawsa 2 nd Edition par 65; quoted Van Vuuren v
eThekwini Municipality (1308/2016) [2017] ZASCA 124; 2018 (1) SA 189 (SCA) at para.20.
8 1997(2) SA 46 (A) at 55H-56C
9 2002 (6) SA 431 (SCA) at para 12.
uniquely within the knowledge of the defendant. The overall onus however remains
with the plaintiff.
[28] Cases of customers slipping and falling in shopping malls and supermarkets
have been dealt with in various matters before our Courts. In a number of those
cases, the substance that caused the fall was firmly established or the facts from
which inferences could be drawn were proven10.
[29] Regarding the inquiry, with reference to Kruger v Coetzee supra, there is no
doubt in this case that the reasonable possibility of a person tripping and falling as a
result of the uneven floors was foreseeable. That was conceded by Mr Du Preez
under cross-examination when he said the uneven floors created a danger in that
someone could trip and fall. In the circumstances, the defendant was obliged to take
such precautions as were reasonable to guard against that eventuality.
[30] The diligens paterfamilias in the position of the defendant would have
foreseen and guarded against the reasonable possibility of the plaintiff slipping and
falling on the uneven surface. Like anybody else who walks in a walkway where the
general public not only has access but indeed is invited to enter, the plaintiff was
entitled to expect that she would walk on it safely.
[31] The plaintiff was an elderly person visiting the mall for the first time. I agree
with the trial Court that the defendant reasonably foresaw the inherent danger
created by the uneven floors and therefore owed a duty to the members of the public
to guard against the eventuality of harm. It failed to take adequate steps to ensure
the safety of the members of the public. One cannot prescribe what steps it should
have taken but a warning either in the form of a sign warning people about the
danger would have served the purpose. Counsel for the defendant conceded that
there was nothing that prevented the defendant from putting up such signs. The
photographs show that there are at least three poles (one with a sign attached) in the
immediate vicinity where the plaintiff fell. He submitted instead that it was not
10 Avonmore Supermarket CC v Venter 2014 (5) SA 399 (SCA); Gordon v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd
and Another (32665/2010) [2014] ZAGPPHC 773 (26 September 2014; Brauns v Shoprite Checkers
(Pty) Ltd 2004 (6) SA 211 (E),
necessary to do so. I disagree. I conclude therefore that negligence was
established.
Causation:
[32] The next question to be examined is whether the negligent conduct of the
defendant was the cause of the injury of the plaintiff. The onus rested with the
plaintiff to show that, but for the failure to give a timely warning by means of placing
visible warning signs, she would not have tripped and fallen.
[33] In Oppelt v Department of Health, Western Cape11 it was said:
‘[45] The Supreme Court of Appeal, in Van Duivenboden, observed:
'A plaintiff is not required to establish the causal link with certainty but
only to establish that the wrongful conduct was probably a cause of the
loss, which calls for a sensible retrospective analysis of what would
probably have occurred, based upon the evidence and what can be
expected to occur in the ordinary course of human affairs rather than
an exercise in metaphysics.'
[46] And in Gore NO it held:
'Application of the but-for test is not based on mathematics, pure
science or philosophy. It is a matter of common sense, based on the
practical way in which the ordinary person's mind works against the
background of everyday life experiences.' [Emphasis added.]
[47] In Lee Nkabinde J said the following about causation in the case of a
negligent omission:
11 2016(1) SA 325 (CC) at paras.45-48.
'(I)n the case of an omission the but-for test requires that a hypothetical
positive act be inserted in the particular set of facts, the so-called
mental removal of the defendant's omission. This means that
reasonable conduct of the defendant would be inserted into the set of
facts. However, as will be shown in detail later, the rule regarding the
application of the test in positive acts and omission cases is not
inflexible. There are cases in which the strict application of the rule
would result in an injustice, hence a requirement for flexibility.
[48] While it may be more difficult to prove a causal link in the context of a
negligent omission than of a commission, Lee explains that the 'but-for' test is
not always the be-all and end-all of the causation enquiry when dealing with
negligent omissions. The starting point, in terms of the 'but-for' test, is to
introduce into the facts a hypothetical non-negligent conduct of the defendant
and then ask the question whether the harm would have nonetheless ensued.
If, but for the negligent omission, the harm would not have ensued, the
requisite causal link would have been established. The rule is not inflexible.
Ultimately, it is a matter of common sense whether the facts establish a
sufficiently close link between the harm and the unreasonable omission.’
[Footnotes omitted]
[34] Mr Du Preez conceded that there is no requirement in the building regulations
for the marking of a white line and that the defendant ‘bore a duty to make sure that
the danger was clearly visible to people’. The white line did not serve the purpose.
According to Mr Du Preez, it was there to ‘attract attention of the raised level and the
difference in level as you come from a lower level up to a higher level.’
[35] In all the circumstances I am unable to find differently from the trial Court.
Order
[36] In the result the following order will be issued:
1. The appeal is dismissed.
2. The appellant is ordered to pay costs on scale B as contemplated in Rule
69 (7) including costs of the application for leave to appeal.
B R TOKOTA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree:
___
D O POTGIETER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree
___________________
M W NOBATANA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the Appellant : J G van der Merwe
Instructed by : Huxtable Attorneys
Counsel for the Respondent : D Niekerk
Instructed by : McCallum Attorneys
Heard on : 11 November 2024
Judgment Delivered on : 3 December 2024