THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 1482/2024
In the matter between:
THE MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
HEALTH OF THE GAUTENG PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT APPELLANT
and
C B M RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: The MEC for Health of the Gauteng Provincial Government v
C B M (1482/2024) [2026] ZASCA 80 (28 May 2026)
Coram: SCHIPPERS, MBATHA, HUGHES and KOEN JJA and
KOOVERJIE AJA
Heard: 7 May 2026
Delivered: 28 May 2026
Summary: Medical negligence – whether hysterectomy caused by negligence of
appellants’ employees – absence of medical records – prima facie evidence of
negligence – evidentiary burden to adduce evidence – not rebutted.
2
ORDER
On appeal from: Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Francis-Subbiah
J, sitting as a court of first instance):
1 The appeal is upheld in part.
2 Paragraph 57(b) of the order of the high court is set aside and is substituted
with the following:
‘(b) (i) The defendant is directed to pay the plaintiff’s proven or agreed
damages suffered as a result of the hysterectomy performed on her by
the defendant’s employees on 24 April 2016;
(ii) The plaintiff’s claim for damages on the ground that the
defendant’s employees failed to provide he r with the necessary
support, failed to refer her to counselling , or provide her with any
information pertaining to the effects of the hysterectomy , alleged in
paragraph 9.5 of the particulars of claim, is dismissed.’
3 The appellant shall pay the costs of the appeal.
JUDGMENT
Koen JA ( Schippers, Mbatha and Hughes JJA and Ko overjie AJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1] While undergoing a caesarean section (the caesarean) on 24 April 2016, the
respondent, Ms CBM , suffered severe post -partum haemorrhage (PPH). This
required her to undergo a total abdominal hysterectomy. She instituted an action
against the appellant, the Member of the Executive Council for Health of the
Gauteng Province, seeking damages, claiming that the medical care she received
3
was substandard resulting in the hysterectomy and further, that she was not
provided with counselling thereafter.
[2] The Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court),
found that the appellant’s employees were negligent in their treatment of the
respondent. It ordered the appellant to pay 100 per cent of her proven or agreed
damages. The appeal is against that order with the leave of the high court.
The background
[3] At around 09h00 on 23 April 2016, shortly before she was expected to give
birth to her first child , the respondent ’s membranes ruptured. She went to the
municipal clinic at Soshanguve (the clinic), arriving there at around 15h00. She
was examined and referred to the Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital, a public
hospital (the hospital), where she arrived at around 16h30.
[4] She testified that she was not attended to until 23h00. An ultrasound was
performed. She was examined by a student doctor who noted a yellowish discharge
in her genital area. He checked the foetal heart rate, which was normal and advised
her not to panic. He later returned with a qualified doctor. This doctor was
unavailable to attend to the respondent as he was busy with other patients. Around
02h00, she was taken to an operating theatre for a caesarean , but there were no
doctors available to attend to her , so she was returned to the ward where she fell
asleep.
[5] On 24 April 2016, according to the respondent ’s particula rs of claim at
around 07h00, an ultrasound was performed. The respondent was informed that the
baby’s heartbeat was suppressed. She was taken to the theatre. A caesarean was
performed at 09h00 under general anaesthesia, as, according to her, the doctors
4
could not locate her spinal cord to administer epidural anaesthesia . Her next
recollection is waking up in the intensive care unit (ICU) some three days later.
[6] She had suffered a severe, life-threatening PPH during the caesarean. PPH
is the leading cause of maternal mor tality. The PPH necessitated an emergency
total abdominal hysterectomy . While recovering in the ICU a professor, whose
name was not disclosed , told her that her uterus had been removed. She was not
provided with a full explanation.
[7] She was subsequently moved to the high care section and later to a general
ward, where she remained until she refused further treatment, stating that she was
well and wished to be with her family. She discharged herself from the hospital on
29 April 2016. The RHT (Refuse Hospital Treatment) form which she signed, did
not refer to a ‘lack of treatment’ . She returned to the hospital on two subsequent
occasions to have stitches removed. Her baby was born without any complications
or cerebral palsy and was normal.
The pleadings and evidence
[8] The respondent pleaded, in support of the allegation of negligence, that the
appellant’s employees: failed to urgently attend to her as per the referral note from
the clinic, when they could have done so; delayed inordinately in providing medical
care to her and her unborn baby; failed to perform the caesarean without any harm
to her when they could and should have done so; failed to adequately conduct the
caesarean, thus resulting in the removal of her reproductive structures without any
justifiable cause; failed to provide the necessary support and/or to refer her to
counselling and to provide her with information pertaining to the effect s of the
delayed performance of the procedure on her child; and failed to display skill and
expertise in treating her. The appellant denied these allegations.
5
[9] The respondent testified and adduced the testimony of Dr Mpho Stella Pooe
(Dr Pooe) , a medical doctor with 18 years ’ experience in obstetrics and
gynaecology. The appellant adduced the evidence of Dr Joseph Simson Mogwane
(Dr Mogwane) and Dr Allen Lebogang Anne Manthata-Cruywagen (Dr Manthata-
Cruywagen). Dr Manthata-Cruywagen is a specialist obstetric gynaecologist, with
a Fellowship and a Master ’s degree in Obstetrics and Gynaecology. She has
practiced as such since 2000 and is the head of department at One Military
Hospital, Pretoria. The evidence of these witnesses is set out below.
The respondent’s evidence
[10] The respondent’s testimony was that she was in labour when her membranes
ruptured at around 09h00 on 23 April 2016 . She disputed that the rupture of the
membranes occurred pre-labour.
The documentary evidence
[11] Dr Mogwane, a senior clinical executive at the hospital , testified that the
majority of the respondent’s medical records pertaining to her admission and
treatment were unavailable and could not be located despite a diligent search. Only
the maternity register, ICU book, and theatre book were available, none of which
recorded the cause of the PPH and hence the need for the hysterectomy. Laboratory
tests subsequently conducted on the uterus, confirmed the absence of infection. All
other information would have been recorded in the patient’s file, which was not
available. Although not called as an expert witness, he confirmed, by virtue of his
training as a medical doctor, that the presence of meconium-stained grade II liquor
would indicate that a caesarean had become necessary. If not performed, the baby
could die.
6
The medical evidence
[12] Dr Pooe and Dr Manthata-Cruywagen submitted expert reports and prepared
a joint summary of points of agreement and disagreement. Dr Pooe’s thesis was
anchored to the respondent already being in labour when her membranes ruptured
on 23 April 2016. She accordingly opined that there was an inordinate delay which
caused the PPH and necessitated the hysterectomy.
[13] Dr Manthata-Cruywagen disputed that there was an inordinate delay . She
concluded that the respondent was not in labour when admitted to the hospital .
A pre-labour rupture of the membran es does not indicate that the respondent was
in labour. She attributed the PPH to the following possible causes: infection of the
uterus, a ‘mistake’ during the operation, or a naturally damaged uterus that does
not contract (an atonic uterus).
The judgment of the high court
[14] The high court accepted the respondent’s evidence. It found, inter alia: that
she was already in labour when she arrived at the hospital ; that meconium-stain
grade II liquor was present in the vaginal discharge on 23 April 2016 after her
admission, which indicated that immediate emergency attention was then required;
and that there were inordinate delays in attending to her before the caesarean was
performed at 09h00 on 24 April 2016 . It concluded inter alia: that the res ipsa
loquitur (the facts speak for themselves) maxim applied; that negligence could be
inferred because the appellant provided piecemeal medical records which did not
explain the critical care the respondent received or should have received ; that an
adverse inference had to be drawn against the appellant that the m issing records
would have supported the respondent ’s contentions ; and, that the probable
inference is that there was no justifiable explanation, other than a negligent failure
to perform the caesarean timeously and without error.
7
[15] As regards the application of the res ipsa loquitur maxim the high court
correctly pointed out, with reliance on HAL obo MML v MEC for Health, Free
State (HAL),1 that the maxim does not find application in cases where there is no
evidence of what caused an injury and when it occurred . It reasoned as follows.
For the maxim to apply it had to be established what went wrong and that in this
case, it was the removal of the respondent’s uterus. What caused the PPH remained
a mystery because of the missing medical records . Whether an act by the
respondent’s employees could be identified as a cause depends on a conclusion to
be drawn from the available evidence and relevant probabilities.
[16] The high court stated that the onus was of critical importance. Where it is
impossible for a plaintiff to provide sufficient evidence on a particular aspect, less
evidence will suffice to establish a prima facie case. Once an inference of
negligence has been drawn, a defendant may offer an explanation which must be
reasonable and not speculative, of how the incident occurred particularly where, as
in medical cases , the treatment accorded to a plaintiff is peculiarly within the
knowledge of the medical staff. If this evidential burden cannot be discharged, the
probability of negligence is not destroyed and negligence is established.
Discussion
[17] It is common cause that the respondent suffered PPH and that this
necessitated the hysterectomy. The central inquiry is whether the respondent
discharged the onus of proving, on a preponderance of probabilities, that the PPH
was caused by negligence, as pleaded, on the part of the appellant’s employees. A
number of issues arise for consideration.
1 HAL obo MML v MEC for Health, Free State [2021] ZASCA 149; [2022] 1 All SA 28 (SCA) (HAL) para 81.
8
The absence of the patient file and other documents
[18] The absence of the medical records featured prominently in the high court’s
judgment and findings. The uncontroverted evidence of Dr Mogwane, however,
established that some of the documents were no longer available because they had
been mislaid or were lost. The appellant presented a plausible explanation for the
absence of the documents. It was not suggested, and rightly so , as there was no
basis for finding that the medical records were available but were deliberately
withheld. The appellant demonstrated good faith . An affidavit had also been
submitted explaining the absence of the records.
[19] As much as the absence of documentary evidence might make it impossible
for the respondent to provide all the relevant evidence on a particular aspect, the
same applies to the appellant. The absence of the documents should have been
treated as a neutral factor, as in HAL.2 No adverse inference should have been
drawn by the high court against the appellant due to the lack of documentary
evidence. In doing so, the high court erred. The merits of the respondent’s claim
fell to be decided on the remaining available evidence.
The res ipsa loquitur maxim
[20] The res ipsa loquitur maxim also featured prominently in the high court’s
reasoning. Over a century ago, this Court, in Van Wyk v Lewis ,3 warned that the
maxim should rarely, if ever, be used in cases of alleged medical negligence,
especially when the facts are not proven and expert opinions are based on
speculation, leading to multiple equally plausible explanations for how an injury
occurred. In medical malpractice, negligence does not automatically result from
2 Ibid.
3 Van Wyk v Lewis 1924 AD 438 at 462.
9
something having gone ‘wrong’. As this Court noted in Buthelezi v Nwaba,4
referencing Hucks v Cole:5
‘[w]ith the best will in the world things sometimes went amiss in surgical operations or medical
treatment. A doctor was not to be held negligent simply because something went wrong.’6
[21] The application of the res ipsa loquitur maxim simply involves the weighing
of all evidence, which a court has to undertake , to determine whether the onus of
proof has been discharged. In Goliath v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape,7 this Court
said:
‘Thus in every case, including one where the maxim res ipsa loquitur is applicable, the inquiry
at the end of the case is whether the plaintiff has discharged the onus resting upon her in
connection with the issue of negligence . . . That being so, and given what Holmes JA described
as the “evolved mystique of the maxim”, the time may well have come for us to heed the call of
Lord Justice Hobhouse to jettison it from our legal lexicon . . .
Medical negligence cases do sometimes involve questions of factual complexity and difficulty
and may require the evaluation of technical and conflicting expert evidence. But the trial
procedure, which is essentially the same as in other cases, is designed to deal with those and thus
no special difficulty ought to be involved in determining them . . .
. . . as Innes CJ stressed in Van Wyk v Lewis at 445, each case ultimately depends upon its own
facts. In that, Kotze JA was at one with the Chief Justice when he observed (at 453) “the question
of negligence or no negligence must be ascertained from a consideration of all the facts viewed
as a whole.” So too was Wessels JA when he stated (at 461-462):
“We cannot determine in the abstract whether a surgeon has or has not exhibited reasonable skill
and care. We must place ourselves as nearly as possible in the exact position in which the surgeon
found himself when he conducted the particular operation and w e must then determine from all
found himself when he conducted the particular operation and w e must then determine from all
the circumstances whether he acted with reasonable care or negligently. Did he act as an average
surgeon placed in similar circumstances would have acted, or did he manifestly fall short of the
4 Buthelezi v Ndaba [2013] ZASCA 72; 2013 (5) SA 437 (SCA) para 15.
5 Hucks v Cole [1968] 118 New LJ.
6 Ibid at 469.
7 Goliath v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape [2014] ZASCA 182; 2015 (2) SA 89 (SCA) paras 12, 13 and 15.
10
skill, care and judgment of the average surgeon in similar circumstances? If he falls short he is
negligent.”’
[22] The maxim is part of inferential reasoning applied when evaluating
conflicting or mutually contradictory evidence , to determine whether a particular
factual inference can be drawn from the facts, having regard to the probabilities
and the credibility of the witnesses. It is not a presumption of law 8 or fact. The
question is simply whether, in the case of a civil dispute, the probabilities support
a particular inference as the more probable one. Removing the respondent’s uterus
to save her life was not an error. The real issue was what caused the PPH and
whether it resulted from any negligent conduct by the appellant’s employees.
The possible causes of the PPH
[23] The evidence confined the possible causes of the PPH to: the alleged
inordinate delay in attending to the respondent (Dr Pooe’s thesis); uterine infection;
a ‘mistake’ during the operation; and a natural failure of the uterus . A subsequent
laboratory test on the uterus found no infection. Although a possible ascending
infection was alluded to, there was no factual basis for such a finding. The
possibility that the PPH resulted from an infection was thus safely ruled out. That
left the alleged inordinate delay, a mistake during the operation, or a natural failure
of the uterus.
The standard of negligence
[24] Professional negligence is determined by reference to the standard of
conduct of the reasonably skilled and careful practitioner in the particular field and
in similar circumstances. A medical practitioner diagnosing and treating a patient
8 Goliath v Member of the Executive Council for Health , Eastern Cape 2014 ZASCA 182; 2015 (2) SA 97 (SCA)
para 10 and Pringle v Administrator Transvaal 1990 (2) SA 379 (W) at 384H.
11
is expected to adhere to the general level of skill, care and diligence possessed and
exercised by members of the branch of the profession to which he or she belongs. It
will only be negligence if the practitioner’s conduct does not comply with that
standard of care9 – imperitia culpae adnumeratur.10 The care which the appellant’s
employees were required to display must be evaluated having regard to, inter alia,
the standards prescribed in the Guidelines for Maternity Care in South Africa , 4th
edition 2015 (the Guidelines).
The alleged inordinate delay
[25] The respondent’s case proceeded solely on Dr Pooe’s thesis that the removal
of her uterus was caused by prolonged labour, with foetal distress. The high court
determined that the delay was excessive, that a problem already existed and that
further medical attention could not have waited. In reaching that conclusion, the
high court erred, as the care rendered was in accordance with the standards set out
in the Guidelines, as shall be demonstrated below. This discussion requires a brief
analysis of Dr Pooe’s evidence.
[26] I commence with a few general observations regarding Dr Pooe as an expert
witness. Of grave concern is that Dr Pooe sought to testify as a medical expert,
relying on her status as a medical practitioner, when she had been suspended by
the Health Professions Council of South Africa. The consequence of suspension is
that a medical practitioner is disqualified from practi sing and her registration is
deemed to be cancelled until the period of suspension has expired.11 Dr Pooe should
have disclosed her suspension to the high court. On the evidence, she did not
disclose thi s fact to the respondent ’s legal team ; it emerged during cross -
examination. When s he testified she was engaged in mining. Her suspension,
9 Topham v MEC for the Department of Health, Mpumalanga (351/2012) [2013] ZASCA 65 (27 May 2013) para 6.
10 If someone professes to have specific skills but acts with incompetence, they are held liable for negligence .
11 Section 44 of the Health Professions Act 56 of 1974.
12
whatever the reasons may be, disqualified her from practising as a medical
practitioner. Another cause for concern was her stubborn refusal to concede that
she never qualified as a specialist obstetrician and gynaecologist.
[27] Dr Pooe’s thesis of an inordinate delay in performing the caesarean was
based on the respondent already being in labour when she experienced the
membrane rupture at 09h00 on 23 April 2016. She sought to support her thesis
from the clinic’s referral of the respondent to the hospital, which she maintained
indicated that the respondent was already at risk and needed individuali sed
attention, because she was in labour.
[28] For the contention that the respondent was already in labour, Dr Pooe relied
mainly, it seems, on the respondent’s own assessment that she was in labour when
her membranes ruptured at 09h00 on 23 April 2016. Such self -diagnosis,
particularly by a primigravida (first-time mother), was explained by Dr Manthata-
Cruywagen and accepted by Dr Pooe to be notoriously unreliable. False labour
might be mistaken for true labour. Dr Pooe conceded that without medical records,
no one knows when labour actually commenced.
[29] Whether a mother is in labour, furthermore, has a very specific meaning, as
defined in the Guidelines. On the evidence of Dr Manthata -Cruywagen, the
necessary criteria to conclude that the respondent was already in labour had not
been satisfied. Dr Pooe’s retort that not all the factors indicated in the Guideline
had to be present, did not support her opinion. As Dr Manthata-Cruywagen pointed
out: the respondent did not have pain; uterine contractions had not commenced (it
was false labour); there was a yellowish vaginal discharge, which indicates normal
13
meconium-stained grade I liquor;12 a vaginal examination was conducted , which
did not cause alarm; and the respondent managed to sleep until the next morning.
The respondent was accordingly required to wait for spontaneous labour to occur,
because where a mother’s ‘water broke’, induction, according to the Guidelines, is
required to start between 12 to 24 hours. This is what happened with the caesarean
being performed at 09h00 on 24 April 2016.
[30] The respondent was referred by the clinic to the hospital because this is what
the protocol requires in instances of a pre-labour rupture of membranes. The clinic
could not attend to her as a mother with pre-labour ruptured membranes and more
than 34 weeks pregnant . This left no choice but to refer her to a hospital , but a
natural birth was still an option. It is only at the hospital where the doctors would
decide how to medically manage the respondent’s condition. The referral per se,
did not mean that there was already something wrong.
[31] Dr Pooe also questioned why the respondent was placed under general
anaesthesia and rhetorically asked whether that was not because the respondent
was already in a compromised situation. The respondent had, however, explained
that the doctors attending to her could not locate her spinal cord, presumably
referring to epidural anaesthesia having been attempted, but this was abandoned in
favour of a general anaesthetic.
12 The meconium-stained grade II discharge was detected only on the morning of 24 April 2016 , meaning that the
foetus was distressed in the morning, necessitating the caesarean during which heavy bleeding, occurred. From this
the high court wrongly concluded that the respondent deserved special management but was not attended to despite
the foetus being in distress, whereas in fact, the yellow discharge, which is meconium grade I, and not grade II as
per the laboratory results, required no special management. Detailed evidence was led on the colour of meconium
staining: grade I is yellow, grade II is yellowish greenish fluid, and grade III is green. On detection of meconium
grade II, the respondent was taken for a caesarean section, and the baby was born with no adverse sequelae.
14
[32] Dr Pooe’s suggestion of complications during the caesarean , due to
prolonged labour, was without any factual or medical foundation. She nevertheless
persisted that the respondent suffered prolonged labour with foetal distress, which
caused the PPH. This opinion also cannot be sustained on the evidence. If the
respondent was already in labour at 09h00 on 23 April 2016, then the foetus , as
explained by Dr Manthata-Cruywagen, would have endured a labour phase of more
than 24 hours before it was born by caesarean section the next day.
[33] Prolonged labour of that duration would have resulted in the baby being
stillborn or suffering some hypoxic or similar injury, resulting in, for example,
cerebral palsy. Yet the baby was born healthy, with no signs of cerebral palsy and
achieved Apgar scores of 7 at 11 minutes and 8 at 35 minutes, which are norm al.
Thus, on the probabilities, the respondent could not yet have been in labour when
her membranes ruptured, nor was the time until the baby was born an inordinate
delay. Dr Pooe disagreed that the baby was unaffected, indicating that the clinical
history supplied by the respondent of her baby’s symptoms were consistent with
autism. This opinion was speculative, without any any foundation in fact, and
without a formal diagnosis to that effect. On the contrary, Dr Manthata-Cruywagen
stated that autism is not a consequence of prolonged labour.
[34] In regard to Dr Pooe’s groundless opinion that the child’s behaviour was
consistent with autism, the dictum of Wessels JA stated in Coopers (South Africa),
bears repetition:13
‘[A]n expert’s opinion represents his reasoned conclusion based on certain facts o r data, which
are either common cause, or established by his own evidence or that of some other competent
witness. Except possibly where it is not controverted, an expert’s bald statement of his opinion
is not of any real assistance. Proper evaluation of th e opinion can only be undertaken if the
13 Coopers (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung mb H 1976 (3) SA 352 (A)
at 371G.
15
process of reasoning which led to the conclusion, including the premises from which the
reasoning proceeds, are disclosed by the expert.’
[35] This dictum was cited with approval by the United Kingdom Supreme Court
in Kennedy,14 in which Lord Reed and Lord Hodge said:
‘If anything, the suggestion that an unsubstantiated ipse dixit [an assertion without proof] carries
little weight is understated; in our view such evidence is worthless.’
[36] That is the case with most of Dr Pooe’s evidence. She could not produce the
medical textbooks on which she relied for her opinion that the respondent was in
labour (her view was contrary to the Guidelines) and indicated that these textbooks
were referred to in the experts’ joint minute . When it was pointed out to her that
the textbooks were not cited there, she then suggested that the minute (which she
had signed) was ‘totally wrong’. She testified that because the respondent was a
primigravida, ‘she might prolong to dilate’. In the next breath she said, ‘it could be
that she was not really a primigravida’, and that the respondent ‘ did have a
previously delivery which was another factor’.
[37] Having regard to the lack of any foundation supporting the opinion
expressed by Dr Pooe and the poor quality of her evidence generally, I have no
hesitation in accepting the evidence of Dr Manthata - Cruywagen where it is in
conflict with that of Dr Pooe . Before us, counsel for the respondent fairly and
correctly conceded that this Court cannot place much reliance on Dr Pooe’s
evidence. The opinion of Dr Manthata-Cruywagen, in contrast to that of Dr Pooe,
was based on cogent reasoning , followed the terms of the Guidelines , was clear,
supported by facts and studies , and presented in a fair manner without favour to
either side.
14 Kennedy v Cordia (Services) LLP [2016] UKSC 6; [2016] 1 WLR 597 para 48.
16
[38] The respondent was monitored after her admission to the hospital and
managed in accordance with the Guidelines. It was not established on a
preponderance of probabilities that there was a culpable , inordinate delay by the
employees of the appellant which resulted in the PPH, hysterectomy and the
removal of the uterus.
A mistake during the operation and the uterus failing naturally
[39] The remaining causes of PPH identified by Dr Manthata-Cruywagen were a
mistake during the operation , or the uterus failing naturally. When specifically
asked whether there was any mismanagement in that regard, she replied that it was
difficult to say. Whether either of these two eventualities arose, would only be
known to the doctors who performed the operation on the respondent, namely Dr
Mebele and Dr Thobejane. These are facts which would fall peculiarly within their
knowledge.15 They were, however, not called as witnesses. It was also not placed
on record that they were not available to give evidence. It must therefore be
accepted that they were available and could give evidence.
[40] A mistake during the operation could only be attributed to an act or omission
by the appellant's employees. Statistically, there is a very high probability against
a hysterectomy becoming necessary in the ordinary course of a caesarean, unless
there was some culpable mistake.
15 Ntsele v MEC for Health, Gauteng Provinc ial Government) [2012] ZAGPJHC 208; [2013] 2 All SA 356 (GSJ)
paras 5 and 121.
17
[41] Where facts fall peculiarly within the knowledge of a n alleged wrongdoer
then, as t his Court stated in Gericke v Sack,16 quoting from Union Government
(Minister of Railways) v Sykes:17
‘less evidence will suffice to establish a prima facie case where the matter is peculiarly within
the knowledge of the opposite party than would under other circumstances be required.’
On the evidence, the remaining and most likely prima facie cause of the PPH and
hysterectomy was a mistake that occurred during the operation. This cast an
evidentiary burden on the appellant to adduce evidence in rebuttal of negligence
on the part of the medical practitioners who performed the operation. The appellant
failed to do so. Although this was not the main ground of negligence relied upon
in the respondent’s particulars of claim, the grounds alleged were sufficiently wide
to cover this claim.
[42] Accordingly, the high court was correct to direct the appellant to pay the
plaintiff’s proven or agreed damages suffered as a result of the hysterectomy
performed on her by the appellant’s employees on 24 April 2016.
The failure to provide rehabilitative therapy
[43] The respondent testified that the professor who attended to her and cautioned
her against discharging herself from the hospital told her that arrangements had
been made for her to consult with a social worker, a psychologist, and a
gynaecologist. These arrangements were in the process of being finalised. She
conceded that he had promised that she would meet with these experts so that she
could be fully informed of the background of what had happened to her. She lost
that opportunity because she discharged herself. She accordingly never allowed the
process of counselling to unfold. Moreover, the unchallenged evidence is that the
16 Gericke v Sack 1978 (1) SA 821 (A) 827F-G.
17 Union Government (Minister of Railways) v Sykes 1913 AD 156 at 173-174.
18
hospital could not force the respondent to remain in hospital : patient autonomy
must be respected.
[44] The respondent subsequently returned to the hospital on two occasions to
have stitches removed, but even then, did not request counselling. If there were still
some obligation to offer counselling , it was previously, by her conduct, rejected.
In these circumstances, there was no culpable omission on the part of the appellant
to render counselling. The high court erred in awarding damages for an alleged
failure to offer counselling.
Conclusion
[45] It has not been shown that the high court was incorrect, in paragraph 57(b)
of its order, to have directed the appellant to pay the respondent’s proven or agreed
damages suffered as a result of the hysterectomy performed on her by the
appellant’s employees on 24 April 2016 . The order directing the payment of
damages on the ground that the appellant’s employees failed to provide her with
the necessary support, failed to refer her to counselling, or failed to provide her
with any information pertaining to the effects of the hysterectomy, alleged in
paragraph 9.5 of the particulars of claim, however, cannot stand. To that extent, the
order of the high court must be set aside and substituted with an order dismissing
that part of the respondent’s claim for damages.
[46] The respondent was substantially successful in the appeal. There is no reason
why the appellant should not pay the respondent’s costs of the appeal.
Order
[47] The following order is granted:
1 The appeal is upheld in part.
19
2 Paragraph 57(b) of the order of the high court is set aside and is substituted
with the following:
‘(b) (i) The defendant is directed to pay the plaintiff’s proven or agreed
damages suffered as a result of the hysterectomy performed on her by
the defendant’s employees on 24 April 2016;
(ii) The plaintiff’s claim for damages on the ground that the
defendant’s employees failed to provide her with the necessary
support, failed to refer her to counselling, or provide her with any
information pertaining to the effects of the hysterectomy, alleged in
paragraph 9.5 of the particulars of claim, is dismissed.’
3 The appellant shall pay the costs of the appeal.
______________________
P A KOEN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
20
Appearances:
For appellant: L Kalashe
Instructed by: State Attorney, Pretoria
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For respondent: K Mhlanga
Instructed by: Maseda Attorneys, Pretoria
Mavuya Inc., Bloemfontein.