THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No: 530/04
REPORTABLE
In the matter between:
SAMUEL FELI THUGWANA APPELLANT
v
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND RESPONDENT
Before: Harms, Brand, Nugent, Mlambo JJA et Cachalia AJA
Heard: 7 November 2005
Delivered: 30 November 2005
Summary: Motor vehicle accidents – compensation – claim for in terms of s 17(1)(b) of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 – p rovisions of s 24(5) read with regulation
2(1)(c) – does failure of the Fund to object to vali dity of clai m within 60 days
render cl aim valid in l aw in all respects – p rovisions of s 2 4(5) relating to
procedural aspe cts – a nd therefo re not relating to substa ntive law –
regulation 2(1)(c) contains a sub stantive req uirement to be com plied with by
claimant.
JUDGMENT
MLAMBO JA
2
[1] The appellant instituted an action for compensation against the
respondent (the Fund) arising from injuries he sustained in a motor
vehicle collision as contemplated in s 17(1)(b)1 of the Road Accident
Fund Act 56 of 1996.
[2] The Fund filed a special plea alleging non-compliance with the
provisions of s 17(1)(b) read with regulation 2(1)(c). 2 The appellant
replicated alleging that he had complied with the provisions of the
regulation; alternatively that he had substantially complied with the
provisions thereof and further alter natively that the regulation was
ultra vires the Act.
[3] The matter come before De Vos J, in the Pretoria High Court,
who dismissed the special plea. 3 She however granted the Fund
leave to appeal to this court, wh ich upheld the appeal and set aside
the order she had granted.4
[4] This court, in upholding th e appeal, observed, with regard to
1 Section 17(1): ‘The Fund or an agent shall –
(a) . . .
(b) subject to any regulation made under s 26, in the case of a claim for compensation under
this section arising from the driving of a motor vehicle where the identity of neither the owner nor
the driver thereof has been established,
be obliged to compensate any person (the third party) for any loss or damage which the third
party has suffered as a result of any bodily injury . . .’
2 ‘(1) In the case of any claim for compensation referred to in s 17(1)(b) of the Act, the Fund,
shall not be liable to compensate any third party unless –
(c) the third party submitted, if reasonabl y possible, within 14 days after being in a
position to do so an affidavit to the polic e in which particulars of the occurrence
concerned were fully set out; and . . .’
3 Reported as Thugwana v Padongelukfonds 2003 (1) SA 310 (T).
4 Reported as Road Accident Fund v Thugwana 2004 (3) SA 169 (SCA).
3
s 24(5), as follows:
‘It may be that this section could provide an answer to the special plea. Counsel
were unable to make considered submi ssions on the law and the facts are not
before the Court. The def endant’s counsel had no obj ection to leave being
granted to the plaintiff to am end his replication, if so advised, to place reliance
on s 24(5). That course commends itself for otherwise the plai ntiff may be done
an injustice.’
[5] Based on this observation the appellant was granted leave to
amend his replication to raise the provisions of s 24(5) 5 in answer to
the special plea. The appellant duly amended his replication and the
special plea was again enrolled for hearing in the court a quo. The
matter became before Els J who upheld the special plea. 6 This
appeal is with the leave of that court.
[6] In upholding the special plea, the court a quo found that the
purpose of s 24(5) was to regulate the procedural matters set out in
that section and nothing further. The court found support for this
view in Krischke v Road Accident Fund. 7 In that case the court
(Jajbhay J) found that the structure of s 24 entailed procedures for
the completion and lodging of a claim form with the Fund. The
5 Section 24(5): ‘If the Fund or the agent does not, within 60 days from the date on which a
claim was sent by registered post or delivered by hand to the Fund or such agent as
contemplated in ss (1), object to the validity thereof, the claim shall be deemed to be valid in law
in all respects.’
6 Reported as Thugwana v Padongelukfonds 2005 (2) SA 217 (T).
7 2004 (4) SA 358 (W).
4
purpose of the section was to a fford the Fund sufficient time to
consider the claim and to decide whet her to contest or settle it. The
learned judge then concluded t hat s 24(5) had no bearing on
substantive law, and (in that case) could not be relied upon to revive
a claim that had become prescribed.
[7] Before us the argument advanced on behalf of the appellant
was essentially that, despite the latter’s non-compliance with the
requirement in Regulation 2(1)(c), the failure by the Fund to object to
his claim in terms of s 24(5), based on that omission, as it should
have, rendered the claim valid in law in all respects.
[8] This construction of s 24(5) read with regulation 2(1)(c) is in
my view incorrect. Regulation 2( 1)(c) prescribes a substantive
requirement to found liability (the subm ission of an affidavit to the
police) and non-compliance therewith is fatal. On the other hand the
purpose of s 24 is to ensure that, before the onset of litigation,
sufficient particulars about the clai m are placed before the Fund to
enable it, timeously, to make a decision whether it resisted or settled
the claim.8 The section has nothing to do with issues not specified
therein. Simply put it is incapable of breathing life into a claim that
failed to arise because of non-compliance with the substantive
8 Nkisimane and others v Santam Insurance Company Ltd 1978 (2) SA 430 (A) at 434F-G;
AA Mutual Insurance Association Ltd v Gcanga 1980 (1) SA 858 (A) at 861B-C.
5
requirement found in regulation 2(1)(c).
[9] Appellant’s counsel was unable, correctly in my view, to
advance any basis on which the reasoning in Krischke v Road
Accident Fund ( supra), which I embrace, could be faulted. In the
result the appeal is dismissed with costs.
__________
D MLAMBO
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR:
HARMS JA
BRAND JA
NUGENT JA
CACHALIA AJA