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[2001] ZASCA 135
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Road Accident Fund v Sauls (423/2000) [2001] ZASCA 135; 2002 (2) SA 55 (SCA) (28 November 2001)
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REPORTABLE
Case Number : 423 / 2000
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter between
THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Appellant
and
MAGDELENE CAROLINE SAULS
Respondent
Composition of the Court : Hefer ACJ, Olivier, Streicher, Navsa JJA and Conradie AJA
Date of hearing : 12 November 2001
Date of delivery : 28 November
2001
SUMMARY
Claim by betrothed lady
witnessing her fiancé being injured - shock resulting in post-traumatic
stress syndrome - claim
allowed.
_________________________________________________________
J U D G M E N T
_________________________________________________________
P J J OLIVIER
OLIVIER JA
[1] On 18 March 1994, Stephen Sauls ('Sauls') parked his motorcar, a
BMW, in a parking bay in Adderley Street, Cape Town. Accompanied
by his
fiancée, Magdelene Jackson ('the plaintiff') Sauls did some shopping
during the lunch hour and returned to the BMW.
The plaintiff got in and sat in
the front passenger seat. Sauls intended to get into the driver's seat.
However, he saw a truck
('the insured vehicle') driven by one Sadick approaching
his vehicle from the back in its designated traffic lane, i e next to the
parking bays. He saw that due to the size and proximity of the insured
vehicle, it would be inopportune at that moment
to open the door on the driver's
side. He then leaned against the car with the front part of his body pressed
against the door
waiting for the insured vehicle to pass. In spite of this
precaution, he was struck by the insured vehicle. He was thrown forward
and
landed in front of the BMW. He was concussed. The plaintiff, who saw the
collision, rushed to his aid. Bystanders warned
her not to touch or move his
body. They remarked on the deathly pallor of his face. The plaintiff thought
that Sauls had been
killed or seriously injured, inter alia, that his
spinal column had been fractured She was led away from the scene in a state of
shock and turmoil.
[2] Sauls was taken to hospital in an ambulance
accompanied by the plaintiff. It transpired that he had suffered, apart from
concussion,
very slight injuries. He was treated for abrasions to the hip and
discharged the same day. The plaintiff, however, was in a condition
of shock
and confusion and was very tense. On the night of the accident she slept badly
and experienced nightmares, reliving the
whole trauma. The next day she
consulted a general practitioner and was treated for shock. On the Monday she
returned to her
work as a senior staff nursing sister, but could not cope. She
was subsequently diagnosed with a post-traumatic stress disorder
which had
become chronic and unlikely to improve. It was alleged that she will never be
able to take up gainful employment again,
will need extensive psychiatric
treatment and medication, and has lost most of her previous enjoyments of life
- she is now withdrawn,
does not want to see anyone, is deeply depressed,
suffers a pattern of sleep disturbance with intrusive, distressing and morbid
dreams.
It was also alleged that she has lost all interest in social,
household and sexual activities and that her whole personality has
changed for
the worse. In short, her case is that as a consequence of her witnessing the
injury to Sauls, she suffered severe emotional
shock and trauma, which gave rise
to a recognised and detectable psychiatric injury, viz post-traumatic
stress disorder.
[3] The plaintiff duly instituted an action for
compensation against the appellant, the statutory body which handles third party
claims.
She claimed a very substantial amount from the appellant in respect of
past and future medical expenses (mostly psychotherapy and
counselling), loss of
earnings and general damages (for permanent disablement and loss of amenities of
life).
[4] The matter went on trial before Knoll J. It was
agreed that the so-called merits would be disposed of first and the question
quantum
was to stand over.
[5] At the end of the trial, it was agreed
or common cause that :
(a) As alleged by the plaintiff, the insured vehicle driven by Sadick had struck Sauls.
(b) The said collision was caused by Sadick's negligence.
(c) Sauls was injured as described above.
(d) For the purposes of this phase of the litigation, that the respondent had in fact suffered shock and emotional trauma, resulting in chronic post-traumatic stress disorder.
(e) There was at the time of the
collision a very close relationship between the plaintiff and Sauls. They were
betrothed, had been
living together as husband and wife for some time and were
indeed married before the commencement of the trial.
[6] In a
thorough judgment, Knoll J held in favour of the plaintiff. The appeal
concerns the question whether that decision was correct.
[7] In
Bester v Commercial Union Versekeringsmaatskappy van SA Bpk 1973 (1) SA
769 (A) this Court, per Botha JA at 779 held that there was no reason in our law
why somebody who, as the result of the negligent act
of another, has suffered
psychiatric injury with consequent indisposition should not be entitled to
compensation, provided the possible
consequences of the negligent act would have
been foreseen by a reasonable person in the place of the wrongdoer. It was
further
held that psychological or psychiatric injury is 'bodily injury' for the
purposes of the predecessor of the legislation now under
consideration.
[8] As far as negligence and the foreseeability test
are concerned, foresight of the reasonable possibility of harm is
required. Foresight of a mere possibility of harm will not suffice (see
Mkhatswa v Minister of Defence 2000 (1) SA 1104 (SCA) at 1112 D - F).
The general manner in which the harm will occur must be reasonably foreseeable,
though not necessarily the
precise or exact manner in which the harm will occur
(see Sea Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Another v Duncan Dock Cold Storage
(Pty) Ltd and Another 2000 (1) SA 827 (SCA) at 840 B - C). The
admission by the appellant that Sadick should have foreseen the reasonable
possibility of harm to Sauls is not conclusive. The
plaintiff must prove, on a
balance of probabilities, that Sadick should have foreseen as a reasonable
possibility that she would be harmed. As stated above, this does not
mean that she must prove that Sadick should have foreseen the precise or exact
manner in which the harm to her would or could occur, but that she must prove
that the general manner of its occurrence was reasonably
foreseeable.
[9] This analysis leads inexorably to the factual
question : did the plaintiff succeed in proving on a balance of probabilities
that
a reasonable person in Sadick's position should have foreseen that, by his
careless driving, he would knock over Sauls and that,
as a consequence, someone
close to him would witness the collision and would suffer severe shock, distress
and emotional trauma resulting
in a psychiatric disorder? In Barnard v
Santam Bpk [1998] ZASCA 84; 1999 (1) SA 202 (SCA) this Court, per Van Heerden DCJ, in
discussing the application of the test for negligence in a comparable case,
quoted at 214
B with approval a dictum of Mason J in The Council of
the Shire of Wyong v Shirt and Others [1980] HCA 12; 146 CLR 40 :
'A risk of injury which is quite unlikely to occur ... may nevertheless be plainly foreseeable. Consequently, when we speak of a risk of injury as being "foreseeable" we are not making any statement as to the probability or improbability of its occurrence, save that we are implicitly asserting that the risk is not one that is far-fetched or fanciful. Although it is true to say that in many cases the greater the degree of probability of the occurrence of the risk the more readily it will be perceived to be a risk, it certainly does not follow that a risk which is unlikely to occur is not foreseeable.'
In the end, this requires a court of law to
evaluate all the relevant facts in order to decide whether the harm caused was
foreseeable
as a reasonable possibility - see Barnard, supra,
214 D - E. In my view, the court a quo correctly held that the harm
suffered by the plaintiff was foreseeable as a reasonable
possibility.
[10] On behalf of the appellant much was made of the fact
that despite the severity of the collision and the body of Sauls being spun
around and thrown some distance forwards, he was only slightly injured. It was
argued that under these circumstances the normal
and foreseeable reaction of a
person in the plaintiff's position would be some shock and trauma, which would
disappear in a relatively
short time, at the latest when it was established that
Sauls was not seriously injured. That such shock and trauma would lead to
a
very serious case of post-traumatic stress disorder, so it was argued was not
reasonably foreseeable. Is this argument sound?
I think not. Although it
later transpired that Sauls was only slightly injured, the manner in which he
was knocked off his feet,
flung into the air and spun around, was witnessed by
the plaintiff. This must have been a traumatic experience to any observer,
much more so to one in a close relationship with the victim. What is more,
when the plaintiff got out of the car and rushed to
Sauls where he was lying on
the ground, he was concussed; and a bystander drew attention to his deathly
pallor. The plaintiff was
justified, in my view, in thinking that Sauls had
been mortally injured, and was dying. Although negligence is a question of
fact,
it is noteworthy that in Barnard's case this Court held that
psychiatric injury to a mother who only heard that her teenage son had been
killed, was reasonably foreseeable.
[11] It was not argued that a
reasonable person in Sadick's position could not or would not have avoided the
accident. In my view, consequently,
the plaintiff succeeded in proving on a
balance of probabilities that Sadick was negligent vis-à-vis
herself in his driving of the insured vehicle, and that his negligence factually
caused the harm she complained of.
[12] This brings us to the question
of legal causation, ie whether the harm or loss suffered is not too
remote to be recognised in law. The test to be applied is a flexible one in
which
factors such as reasonable foreseeability, directness, the absence or
presence of a novus actus interveniens, legal policy, reasonableness,
fairness and justice all play their part (see S v Mokgethi en Andere 1990
(1) SA 32 (A) at 39 D - 41 B; International Shipping Co (Pty) Ltd v Bentley
1990 (1) SA 680 (A) at 700 E - 701 F; Smit v Abrahams 1994 (4) SA 1
(A) at 14 F - 15 F; Standard Chartered Bank of Canada v Nedperm Bank Ltd
[1994] ZASCA 146; 1994 (4) SA 747 (A) at 764 I - 765 B).
[13] In my view, the
so-called flexible approach or test of legal causation does not require in the
present case either a denial of or
limitation to the plaintiff's claim, apart
from questions of proof of the quantum of damages. It must be accepted that in
order
to be successful a plaintiff in the respondent's position must prove, not
mere nervous shock or trauma, but that she or he had sustained
a detectable
psychiatric injury. That this must be so, is, in my view, a necessary and
reasonable limitation to a plaintiff's claim.
See Barnard v Santam Bpk
[1998] ZASCA 84; 1999 (1) SA 202 (SCA) at 208 J - 209 A and 216 E - F. From what has been
said above, the harm caused to the plaintiff was reasonably foreseeable
and
could easily have been avoided. The harm was caused directly to the plaintiff,
she being in the BMW and witnessing the collision
first hand. No novus
actus interveniens in the legal sense was proved. And in the light of our
law's clear attitude that claims in respect of negligently caused shock
and
emotional trauma resulting in a detectable psychiatric injury are actionable,
(see Bester, supra; Clinton-Parker v Administrator, Transvaal;
Dawkins v Administrator, Transvaal 1996 (2) SA 37 (W); Majiet v Santam
Ltd [1997] 4 All SA 555 (C); Barnard v Santam Bpk, supra) one
would require clear and convincing reasons why the action in the present case
should not succeed or not succeed to the full
extent of the plaintiff's
loss.
[14] In this connection counsel for the appellant argued that
the distinguishing factor in the present claim is the serious harm caused
to the
plaintiff compared with the negligible harm caused to the primary victim, Sauls.
He argued that if the present claim where
the primary harm is negligible is
allowed, the floodgates will be opened to a multitude of claims, where huge
amounts will be sought
for secondary harm, whether genuine or simulated.
Potentially every motor collision case could and, he argued, probably will in
future sprout claims of the sort now before us.
[15] Furthermore, he
argued, if the present claim is allowed to a live-in lover or betrothed, what is
there to negate similar claims by
partners to a customary or common law or
religious union, children, parents, grandchildren, favourite uncles and aunts,
close friends,
etc. Even without any further development, and taking
the facts of the case now before us as they stand, counsel for the appellant
argued, the potential liability of every member of society is increased beyond
imagination. Claims of this kind would, if allowed,
counsel argued, very soon
bankrupt the Road Accident Fund.
[16] The worrisome argument is not so
much the slightness of the harm to Saul as compared with that to the plaintiff.
Her claim is an
independent one, and does not derive from the seriousness of
Saul's injuries, but from her own perceptions of the collision, the
way his body
was flung away, and the apparent gravity of his condition for some time
thereafter. The worrisome and contentious
feature in this case is the absence,
at the time of the accident, of ties of consanguinity between Sauls and the
plaintiff. They
were betrothed and living together as husband and wife. If
the door is opened to claims in such a situation, it may be opened to
claims by
various categories of persons, as mentioned above. This is really where the
floodgates argument comes in.
[17] Over the years various limitations
to claims of the sort now under consideration have been considered, here and
abroad. They have
been considered in the South African cases mentioned above,
and do not need repetition. I can find no general, 'public policy'
limitation
to the claim of a plaintiff, other than a correct and careful application of the
well-known requirements of delictual
liability and of the onus of proof. It is
not justifiable to limit the sort of claim now under consideration, as has been
offered
as one solution, to a defined relationship between the primary and
secondary victims, such as parent and child, husband and wife,
etc. Of
course in determining limitations a court will take into consideration the
relationship between the primary and secondary victims.
The question is one of
legal policy, reasonableness, fairness and justice, ie was the
relationship between the primary and secondary victims such that the claim
should be allowed, taking all the facts into consideration.
It is true that in
the previous South African cases where the plaintiffs have succeeded in damages
claims for psychiatric injury,
there has been either a blood or a legal
relationship - Barnard, Bester, Clinton-Parker and
Majiet, supra. In Masiba and Another v Constantia Insurance
Co Ltd and Another 1982 (4) SA 333 (C) at 343 E - F Berman AJ was of the
view that sort of claim now under discussion was actionable, even if the injury
or harm was
threatening only to the claimant's chattel, such as his motor car.
Such a claim is not now before us, and the decision as to the
correctness of
Masiba, on this point, must stand over for another day.
After a
thorough review of previous decisions in England, Lord Keith of Keinkel
formulated the applicable principle as follows in
his speech in Alcock v
Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 A C 311 at 397 C - F
:
'As regards the class of persons to whom a duty may be owed to take reasonable care to avoid inflicting psychiatric illness through nervous shock sustained by reason of physical injury or peril to another, I think it sufficient that reasonable foreseeability should be the guide. I would not seek to limit the class by reference to particular relationships such as husband and wife or parent and child. The kinds of relationship which may involve close ties of love and affection are numerous, and it is the existence of such ties which leads to mental disturbance when the loved one suffers a catastrophe. They may be present in family relationships or those of close friendship, and may be stronger in the case of engaged couples than in that of persons who have been married to each other for many years. It is common knowledge that such ties exist, and reasonably foreseeable that those bond by them may in certain circumstances be at real risk of psychiatric illness if the loved one is injured or put in peril. The closeness of the tie would, however, require to be proved by a plaintiff, though no doubt being capable of being presumed in appropriate cases. The case of a bystander unconnected with the victims of an accident is difficult. Psychiatric injury to him would not ordinarily, in my view, be within the range of reasonable foreseeability, but could not perhaps be entirely
excluded from it if the circumstances of a catastrophe occurring
very close to him were particularly horrific.'
With respect, I agree with
this principle and, as a consequence in particular cases, such as the present
are, of giving an action
to one who is engaged to the primary
victim.
[18] A further existing limitation is, of course, proof of the
actual harm suffered and its sequelae, the burden of which rests on the
claimant. It is in this frequently neglected field that extravagant claims
will be exposed.
[19] In the present case, I have come to the
conclusion that the plaintiff has proved on a balance of probabilities that she
is, in principle,
entitled to compensation and damages because of the
psychiatric injury which she has suffered as a consequence of the collision on
18 March 1994 between Sauls and the insured vehicle driven by
Sadick.
[20] The following order is made :
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
P J J OLIVIER JA
CONCURRING
:
HEFER ACJ
STREICHER JA
NAVSA
JA
CONRADIE
AJA