Cele v Road Accident Fund (357/2024) [2026] ZAMPMBHC 2 (21 January 2026)

70 Reportability
Personal Injury Law - Road Accident Fund

Brief Summary

Road Accident Fund — Prescription — The Plaintiff's claim for injuries from a 2017 accident was argued to be prescribed by the Fund, which contended that summons was not issued within the statutory 5-year period. The Plaintiff argued that the Fund's failure to process the claim warranted the extension of the prescription period. The court held that the Fund had a duty to manage the claim properly and dismissed the Fund's special plea on prescription.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns a delictual damages action instituted against the Road Accident Fund (“the Fund”) arising from bodily injuries sustained in a motor vehicle collision. The Plaintiff, Bheki Maurice Cele, sued the Fund for compensation flowing from an accident that occurred on or about 16 July 2017 near R[...] E[...] Road, Nelspruit, Mpumalanga Province, when two vehicles collided.


The matter came before the High Court of South Africa, Mpumalanga Division, Mbombela Main Seat, as a trial action in which the Defendant delivered a plea that included two special pleas. By agreement at the hearing, the court was requested to determine the special pleas first, and in particular to deal only with the special plea of prescription.


The dispute, as narrowed for determination, therefore concerned whether the Plaintiff’s claim had become prescribed under the time-bar provisions of the Road Accident Fund Act because summons was issued (and served) more than five years after the accident date, and whether the Fund’s prior role in “representing” the Plaintiff within its internal claims system affected that outcome.


2. Material Facts


The court decided the prescription special plea without oral evidence, relying on the parties’ submissions and what was either common cause or not placed in dispute.


It was common cause (or treated as effectively undisputed on the papers and submissions) that the collision giving rise to the Plaintiff’s cause of action occurred on or about 16 July 2017.


It was further accepted in argument that the Plaintiff lodged a claim directly with the Fund shortly after the accident. The judgment records inconsistent dates in the Plaintiff’s heads of argument, but the Fund’s version (also recorded by the court) was that the Plaintiff lodged a direct claim with the Fund on 21 July 2017.


A further fact the court treated as undisputed was that, through its internal claims system, the Fund had assumed a role described as acting as the Plaintiff’s legal representative prior to the appointment of the Plaintiff’s current attorneys. The Fund did not dispute that it assumed this role, nor did it dispute that it did not process the claim to finality before prescription became an issue.


The Plaintiff terminated the Fund’s mandate on or about 24 January 2022, after which the Plaintiff instructed Nkhwashu-Magaggula Attorneys. The termination and substitution were followed by service of the termination of mandate and notice of appointment as attorneys of record, recorded as having occurred on or about 25 January 2022.


Summons was issued on 31 January 2024 and served on the Fund on 24 February 2024.


The Fund’s special plea alleged that the Plaintiff was required by section 23(3) of the Road Accident Fund Act to issue and file summons within five years from the date the cause of action arose, that the five-year period expired on 15 July 2022, and that summons issued on 31 January 2024 was therefore out of time.


The Plaintiff’s replication asserted, in substance, that the Plaintiff had lodged the claim without external legal advice, that the Fund acted on the Plaintiff’s behalf, that the Plaintiff could not reasonably have been expected to issue summons while “represented” by the Fund, and that the Fund could not issue summons against itself. The replication relied on the termination of mandate and subsequent appointment of attorneys as the point from which the Plaintiff could reasonably be expected to take steps.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the Plaintiff’s claim had prescribed under the five-year time bar applicable to Road Accident Fund claims, given the date of the accident and the date of issue (and service) of summons.


A related legal issue was whether section 12(3) of the Prescription Act, which deals generally with when prescription begins to run, had any application in Road Accident Fund matters, or whether prescription is regulated exclusively by the Road Accident Fund Act.


The case further presented a question of application of law to fact combined with an evaluative assessment. Even accepting that the statutory five-year period ran from the accident date, the court had to determine whether, on the facts it accepted as undisputed, it was fair and legally acceptable for the Fund to rely on prescription where the Fund had acted as the Plaintiff’s internal “legal representative” and failed to process the claim for most of the five-year period.


The dispute thus involved legal interpretation (the governing prescription regime), application (how the regime applied on the accepted timeline), and an evaluative judgment (whether the Fund should be permitted to benefit from the consequences of its own inaction in circumstances where it had assumed a representative role).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by addressing the Prescription Act argument. It held that section 12(3) of the Prescription Act is not applicable to Road Accident Fund matters, accepting the Fund’s contention on this point as correct in light of Constitutional Court authority drawing a distinction between the Prescription Act and the Road Accident Fund Act. The court therefore rejected any approach that would import the Prescription Act’s general rules into the specific statutory scheme governing Road Accident Fund prescription.


However, the court treated this conclusion as not dispositive of the special plea. It noted that no evidence was led, and it distilled from the submissions a set of propositions it treated as effectively undisputed: the Fund had assumed the Plaintiff’s legal representation before the Plaintiff’s current attorneys came on record; the Fund did not process the claim until it prescribed (or until prescription became an issue); and the Plaintiff terminated the Fund’s mandate because of the Fund’s failure to process the claim.


On that factual footing, the court reasoned that, because the Fund acted as the Plaintiff’s legal representative through its internal claims system, the Fund bore a duty to ensure the claim was properly dealt with. It found, as a matter of evaluation, that the Fund did not handle the Plaintiff’s matter with the required care.


The court then engaged the Fund’s main contention on the timeline. It accepted that, on the Fund’s version, the Fund’s mandate was terminated about five months before the five-year period expired, and that the Plaintiff’s attorneys therefore had that remaining period within which to issue summons. The court acknowledged that this argument might appear persuasive “at face value”.


Nevertheless, the court concluded that the Fund should not be allowed to benefit from the consequence of its own prior inaction, drawing support from authorities relied upon by the Plaintiff that emphasise a heightened duty of care when the Fund is dealing with unrepresented claimants and should not profit from its neglect. The court distinguished those cases on the basis that they dealt with situations where prescription had already taken effect, whereas here the mandate was terminated before prescription would have operated. This led the court to formulate the specific question in this matter as whether the Plaintiff’s newly-appointed attorneys should be blamed for not issuing summons within the remaining five-month period.


The court answered that question in the negative. It reasoned that the Plaintiff should have the full benefit of the five-year statutory period afforded by the Road Accident Fund Act, and that in this instance the Fund had effectively wasted four years and seven months, without offering an explanation. In the court’s evaluation, it would be unfair to expect the Plaintiff and the newly-appointed attorneys to prepare and issue summons “hastily” within a truncated remaining period when the statutory scheme contemplated a full five-year window, particularly where the shortening of the available time was attributable to the Fund’s own failure to process the claim while it purported to act on the Plaintiff’s behalf.


On that basis, the court held that the special plea of prescription could not succeed, and it dismissed the plea.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court held that the Plaintiff’s claim had not prescribed and dismissed the Defendant’s special plea on prescription.


The court ordered the Defendant to pay the Plaintiff’s costs on the High Court Scale C.


Cases Cited


Lottering v RAF and Another 2021 ZANCHC 36 (13 August 2021)


Ralph v The Road Accident Fund 2014/03112 [2016] ZAGPJHC 94


Road Accident Fund v Mdeyide (CCT/10/10) [2010] ZACC 18; 2011 (1) BCLR 1 (CC); 2011 (2) SA 26 (CC) (30 September 2010)


Van Zyl NO v Road Accident Fund (full citation not provided in the judgment text)


Legislation Cited


Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996, section 23(3)


Prescription Act, section 12(3)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court found that section 12(3) of the Prescription Act does not apply to Road Accident Fund matters, which are governed by the prescription provisions in the Road Accident Fund Act. Despite the accident having occurred more than five years before summons was issued, the court concluded that the Fund had, through its internal system, assumed the role of the Plaintiff’s legal representative and failed to process the claim for the bulk of the statutory period. The court held that it would be unfair for the Fund to rely on prescription in circumstances where its own inaction effectively deprived the Plaintiff of the full benefit of the statutory period. The Defendant’s special plea of prescription was therefore dismissed, with costs awarded to the Plaintiff on High Court Scale C.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that prescription for Road Accident Fund claims is governed by the Road Accident Fund Act, and that the general prescription provisions in the Prescription Act, including section 12(3), are not applicable in that statutory context.


The judgment further applied the principle, drawn from the authorities relied upon, that where the Fund engages directly with claimants and assumes a representative or guiding role in the processing and settlement of claims, a heightened duty of care rests on the Fund to take reasonable steps to prevent prejudice to the claimant, including prejudice arising from prescription.


In applying those principles, the court endorsed an evaluative norm that the Fund should not be permitted to benefit from its own inaction where the Fund’s failure to process the claim within the statutory period contributed materially to the claimant’s position, and where reliance on prescription would operate unfairly in the circumstances accepted by the court.

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
MPUMALANGA DIVISION, MBOMBELA MAIN SEAT
JUDGMENT

Case No.: 357/2024
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED YES/NO
SIGNATURE NGWENYA AJ
DATE 21 JANUARY 2026

In the application between:
BHEKI MAURICE CELE PLAINTIFF

And

ROAD ACCIDENT FUND DEFENDANT
LINK NO: 4131702
___________________________________________________________________

JUDGMENT


NGWENYA AJ

[1] The Plaintiff sued the Road Accident Fund (“ the Fund”) for injuries arising out
of an accident that happened on or about the 16 th of July 2017, near R[...] E[...]
Road, Nelspruit, Mpumalanga Province, when two vehicles collided.

[2] The Defendant filed its plea, including two special pleas.

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[3] At the hearing , the parties agreed that I should first determine the special
pleas. In fact, I was asked to deal only with one of the special pleas, i.e., the special
plea on prescription. This special plea is couched in the following terms:

“The Plaintiff is required in terms of section 23(3) of the Road Accident Fund
Act 56 of 1996 to issue and file summons within period of 5 years from the
date the cause of action arose

The Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff’s claim in his personal capacity has
become prescribed in that a period of 5 years within which the Plaintiff was
supposed to issue and serve summons to the Defendant has expired.

The Defendant pleads that the period of 5 years from the date of the cause of
action has elapsed on the 15th day of July 2022.

The Plaintiff issued his summons on the 31 st of January 2024. Under the
circumstances, the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff’s claim has become
prescribed.”

[4] The Plaintiff replicated as follows:

“Ad paragraph 1, 2, 3 and 4

1.1 The contents of this paragraph are denied and in application of the denial
the Plaintiff admits as follows:

1.1.1 The Plaintiff lodged a claim on his own accord and appointed the
Road Accident Fund to act on his behalf.

1.1.2 During this period, the Plaintiff could not have been expected to
issue summons as he was represented by the Road Accident Fund.

1.1.3 On the 24 th of January 2022, the Plaintiff terminated the mandate of
the Road Accident Fund and appointed Nkhwashu -Magaggula

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Attorneys as his attorneys of record. This when the Plaintiff could
have reasonably expected to issue as the RAF could not issue
summons against itself. A copy of the termination of mandate, notice
of entrance as attorneys of record and special power of attorney
attached hereto and marked “NM1”, “NM2” and “NM3” respectively.”

[5] Both counsel for the Plaintiff and the Fund addressed me , after which I
requested further submission s in terms of heads of argument. In deed, the parties
filed their heads of argument.

[6] In its heads of argument, the Plaintiff dealt with the background and stated as
follows:

[6.1] The accident took place on the 16th of July 2017

[6.2] On the 21 st of July 2014 , the Plaintiff lodged its claim directly with the
Fund.

[6.3] The Fund failed to finalise the claim and further failed to inform the
Plaintiff that the claim would prescribe.

[6.4] When the Plaintiff realised that the Fund was neglecting the claim, he
approached attorneys, terminated the Fund’s mandate on the 25 th of
January 2022, and, through the attorneys, issued summons on the 31 st
of January 2024.

[7] It then referred to case law and legislation. I was referred to the case of
Lottering v RAF and Another 2021 ZANCHC 36 (13 August 2021 ). I was referred to
the paragraph where the court found that , where the Fund represents a claimant in
settling a claim without external legal advice, a greater duty of care rests on the Fund
to take all reasonable steps to prevent the claim from prescribing. The court ,
dismissing the Fund's special plea of prescription, found it unjust for the Fund to
benefit from its inaction.

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[8] I was then referred to section 12(3) of the Prescription Act , which deals with
prescriptions in general. I also referred to another c ase, Ralph v The Road Accident
Fund 20 14/03112 [2016] ZAGPJHC 94. This case also echoed the sentiments
mentioned in the case above. Lastly , I was referred to the case of the Road
Accident Fund v Mdeyide (CCT/10/10) [2010] ZACC 18; 2011 (1) 1 BCLR 1 (CC);
2011 (2) SA 26 CC (30 September 2010).

[9] The Fund also submitted heads of argument and dealt with the background as
follows:

[9.1] The Plaintiff lodged a direct claim with the Fund on the 21 st July
2017.

9.2 On the 24 th of January 2022, the Plaintiff terminated the mandate of
the Fund and instructed attorneys.

9.3 On the 25 th of January 2022 , the Plaintiff’s attorneys served a
termination of mandate and a notice of appointment as attorneys of
record.

9.4 On 31 January 2024, the Plaintiff issued a summons, and the
summons was served on the 24th of February 2024.

[10] The Fund then also referred to legislation and case law.

[11] First, I was referred to section 23(3) of t he Road Accident Fund 56 of 1995.
The Fund submitted that , under this section , a claimant has 5 years to issue a
summons.

[12] I was further referred to the case of Van Zyl NO v Road Accident Fund , in
which the court held that prescription in relation to the Road Accident is regulated by
section 23(1), which supersedes all other laws governing prescription.

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[13] It also referred to another case ; in fact , it is the same case the Plaintiff
referred to , except that the Fund cited a section in which the Constitutional Court
said there is a difference between the Prescription Act and the RAF Act.

[14] It then concluded that the prescription started running on the 16th of July 2017.

DISCUSSION

[15] From the onset , I need to make it clear that section 12(3) of the Prescription
Act is not applicable to the RAF matters. Therefore , the Fund’s contention that
section 12(3) is not applicable in this matter is correct , as clearly stated in the
Constitutional Court judgment. However, that is not the end of the matter.

[16] There was no evidence , oral or otherwise, led by the parties. From the
submissions, I gathered the following:

[16.1] The Fund ha s not disputed that it ha d assumed the Plaintiff's legal
representation before the Plaintiff’s current attorneys came on record.

[16.2] The Fund has not disputed that it did not process the claim until it
prescribed.

[16.3] The Fund has not disputed that the Plaintiff terminated the Fund’s
mandate because the latter failed to process the claim.

[17] It is true that, through its internal claims system, the Fund acted as the
Plaintiff's legal representative. Accordingly, it had a duty to ensure that the Plaintiff's
claim was properly dealt with. I find that the Fund did not handle the Plaintiff’s case
with care.

[18] The Fund’s argument that the mandate was terminated five months before
expiry of the 5 years , and th at it prescribed in the hands of the Plaintiff’s current
attorney, may seem valid at face value. However, I find that the Fund should not
benefit from this, as stated in the cases referred to by the Plaintiff. Those cases do

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not address the situation in which the mandate is terminated before the prescription
takes effect. Those cases deal with matters where prescription has already taken
place. Therefore , the question in this matter is slightly different in that Plaintiff’s
attorneys came on record 5 months prior to the prescription . The question is: should
they be blamed for not issuing summons within the 5-month period?

[19] I find that they should not be blamed , as the Plaintiff should have the full
benefit of the 5-year period afforded to it by the statute . In this instance, the Fund
wasted 4 years and 7 months, and no explanation has been offered for this. It would
be unfair to expect the Plaintiff and the attorneys to work on the summons hastily
within a shorter period, when the statute affords the Plaintiff 5 years to do so.

[20] In the premises , I find that the matter has not prescribed, and I make the
following order:

1. The Defendant’s special plea on prescription is dismissed.
2. The Defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiff’s costs on High Court Scale C.



________________________
T S NGWENYA AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF HIGH COURT,
MPUMALANGA, MBOMBELA

Date of hearing: 09 JUNE 2025
Date of judgment: 21 JANUARY 2026

Counsel for the Plaintiff: Adv SP Nkosi
Instructed by: Nkhwashu Magagula Attorneys
Tel No: 065 082 8035/076 6121 010
Email Address: nmattorneys@webmail.co.za/ samupertunia@gmail.com

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Counsel for the Defendant: Ms G Mokoena
Instructed by: State Attorney
Tel No: 013 101 3722 / 066 308 9159
Email Address: gugum1@raf.co.za