WALTHER
H. KAESE v F.D. THERON
CASE NO. (P) I 486/2004
2008/07/10
Maritz,
J.
DELICT
MOTOR
LAW
ANIMALS
Delict –
unlawfulness - duty of owner, lessee or occupier of farm along
proclaimed roads to maintain fence running along road – failure to
maintain and to restrict movement of stock
Motor law – respective duties of
farmers and motorists – duties of farmers to maintain fences and to
keep livestock from straying onto roads – duties of drivers to keep
lookout
Animals – delictual action for
damages caused by domesticated animals – duty of farmer to prevent
stock from straying onto roads
CASE NO. (P) I 486/2004
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NAMIBIA
In
the matter between:
WALTER H. KAESE Plaintiff
versus
F.D. THERON Defendant
CORAM: MARITZ,
J.
Heard
on: 16 – 18 March 2004
Delivered
on: 10 July 2008
JUDGMENT
MARITZ, J.:
[1] The
issues in this delictual action for damages highlight the respective
duties of motorists and livestock farmers along national or trunk
roads in Namibia. With a developing economy placing increasing
pressure on the road infrastructure; improvements in the design and
surfacing of roads and advances in vehicle technology allowing
virtually all motorists to travel at the maximum permissible speed
along national and trunk roads, the days of the odd motor vehicle
negotiating a narrow gravel road in open country at a moderate speed
to get from one town to another are long gone. With increased traffic
volumes on roads, more and more emphasis is being placed on the
elimination or limitation of risks endangering the safety
of road users. To enhance safety in the motoring environment,
national and trunk roads have been fenced off; objects and vegetation
plants which may impede the peripheral view of drivers have been
removed or reduced; roads have been surfaced; road signs and markings
have been put in place and the movement of livestock in road reserves
have been regulated. Livestock farmers along these roads have not
been isolated from these developments. The increase in traffic and
the permissible speed thereof has a natural and logical bearing on
the level of care required from them as reasonable persons towards
the safety of road users. At the same time, motorists must be mindful
that, with vast areas of extensive cattle farming operations in
Namibia and with game and predators abound, there is no measure which
effectively insulates roads from the danger of animals straying onto
them.
It is either common cause or no longer disputed
that the plaintiff, driving his 1994 Isuzu KB280 pickup with
registration number N 38469 W in a Westerly direction on
the main road between Okahandja and Karibib on the evening of 22 May
2002, collided with a cow crossing the road from the South. As a
result of the collision, the Plaintiffs vehicle was damaged and the
fair, reasonable and necessary costs of repair thereof amounted to
N$31 656.10. The plaintiff alleges that the cow belonged to the
defendant and that he was negligent to allow the cow to stray onto
the road. Pleading that the defendant’s negligence was the sole
cause of the collision, the plaintiff is seeking from the Defendant
payment of his damages suffered as a consequence.
What remains in issue between the litigants is
(a) whether the defendant had a legal duty to take measures to
prevent the cow from straying onto the road; (b) if so, whether he
was negligent in failing to take those measures thus causing or
contributing to the collision and (c) whether the plaintiff’s
negligence caused or also contributed to the collision. In what
follows, I shall deal with these issues in that order.
The
first issue must be assessed objectively in accordance with what the
Court conceives to be “society's
notions of what justice demands”
in the peculiar circumstances which prevailed at the time of the
incident. Whether the defendant had any legal duty to prevent the
cow from straying onto the road raises mainly two ancillary factual
issues: (i) Was the defendant obliged to maintain the fences running
parallel with the road and separating the road reserve from the
grazing areas on the farm and (ii) was the defendant obliged to
restrict the movements of the cow to grazing areas outside the road
reserve?
It has been held that there is no general duty on farmers to fence
off public roads traversing their properties.
As long ago as 1966 Williamson JA was already pressed to find that
farmers should be obliged to fence off public roads.
He declined, holding that the time had not arrived for such a
development. Whether “society's notions of what justice demands”
have since changed - given the developments I have alluded to at the
outset of this judgement – is also not necessary to answer in this
case. It is now well settled law that “once a fence has been
erected for the purpose of keeping animals from straying onto the
road, there is a duty on a landowner to see that the fence is kept
in order and free from holes or openings through which his or her
animals can escape.”
This duty has also found favour with the Legislator: With the
exception of fences erected along freeways, any fence erected along
a proclaimed road must be maintained by “the owner, lessee or
occupier of the farm on which or along the boundary of which” the
fence has been erected.
The two farms, situated on either side of the road where the
collision occurred, are known as Okauakondo-North No.10 and
Okanapehuiri No.19, sometimes collectively referred to as “Okasise”
- after a railway siding in the area. They were fenced off from the
road. Both were owned by Ms. J.M.T. Tegethoff and leased from
February 2000 to the Defendant, a neighbouring
farmer, in terms of a relocated lease agreement. In terms of clause
3 of the relocated agreement, the defendant was responsible to the
lessor for the maintenance of the fences on the farms. Had it only
been for these facts, the issue would not have arisen at all.
Unfortunately, it is more complicated.
The already strained relationship between the defendant and
Tegethoff turned distinctly sour when she sold the farms during
April 2000 to Mr. Gottfriedt Tsuseb. The defendant maintained that
the relocation of the previous written lease agreement had also
revived an earlier option which he had to purchase the farms on
Tegethoff’s passing. He therefore sought and obtained an urgent
interim interdict pending the outcome of a rule nisi calling
upon Tegethoff to show cause why she should not be restrained from
effecting transfer of the properties to Tsuseb. The rule was
discharged on 23 February 2001 with costs. Dissatisfied with the
outcome of the application, the defendant appealed against the
discharge to the Supreme Court. The appeal was heard on 11 April
2002. The defendant’s argument was apparently not well received
during the hearing and, doubtful that the appeal would meet with any
success, the defendant sought and obtained alternative grazing. He
claims that, rather than waiting for the outcome of the appeal, he
vacated the farms and moved his cattle to other pastures secured by
agreement with a third party. He testified that he had moved his
herds during the days following the appeal hearing and had vacated
the farms completely by 22 April 2002 – that is, except for one
heifer he had left behind because she was too wild to be driven
along with the other cattle. He no longer leased or occupied the
farms from that date on and had no further responsibilities towards
the maintenance of the fences thereon – particularly not on the
date, about a month later, when the collision occurred.
The plaintiff’s case paints a different picture. He called in
evidence Ms E.S. von Dewitz, the daughter of the 85 year old
Tegethoff who had been managing her affairs in terms of a written
power of attorney since 1999. She recalled that the defendant had
occupied the farms with about 600 head of cattle until well after
transfer of the farms was registered in Tsuseb’s name on 26 June
2002 – the defendant’s appeal having been dismissed on 19 June
2002 by the Supreme Court. According to her, the Defendant was the
“legal lessee” until that date. As a matter of fact, she
claimed, he still paid rent until June 2002. She flatly denied
suggestions to the contrary, recounting that the defendant’s
attorneys still wrote her a letter during that time offering that he
would immediately vacate the farms if her mother would agree to pay
her own costs in the appeal. She also remembered an argument she had
with the defendant during July 2002 when she wanted to remove a
pump. The defendant protested, saying that his cattle would die of
thirst and threatened to hold her responsible.
Her evidence that the defendant was still occupying the farms as a
lessee when the collision occurred on 22 May 2002 is indirectly
corroborated by the events which took place immediately after the
incident. When, following a report to him by another farmer, the
plaintiff phoned the defendant to inform him about the incident and
about other cattle present in the road reserve, the defendant’s
wife answered and promised to send her son to investigate. When the
defendant’s son arrived, according to the plaintiff, he
acknowledged that the cow was “theirs”. Defendant’s son,
however, denied in evidence that he had acknowledged ownership and
testified that what he had said was that it could have been one of
his father’s cattle which had broken through a fence. I shall deal
with this factual dispute later in the judgment. What is of
significance at this stage of the enquiry, is that the defendant’s
wife did not immediately deny that the cow or the other cattle
present on the scene could be that of the defendant. One would have
expected her to do so and not to put her son through the trouble of
attending the scene had the defendant vacated the farms a month
earlier. It is also common cause that the defendant’s son loaded
the carcass on his vehicle and drove off with it to their homestead
where the edible parts were distributed amongst their employees.
I have no hesitation in rejecting the defendant’s evidence that he
was no longer in occupation of the farms on the date of the
collision. Whilst I am mindful that the ultimately unsuccessful
litigation by the Defendant against her mother might have left Von
Dewitz with a bitter taste about the affair, I have not gained the
impression that she had coloured her
evidence to paint the defendant black. She did not know the
plaintiff and was only consulted shortly before the trial. Both her
demeanour as a witness and the consistency
of her evidence are beyond reproach. She impressed me as a credible
witness and the spontaneity with which she recalled the lawyer’s
compromise offer on costs of the appeal and the argument with the
defendant about the pump, gave her evidence such a clear ring of
truth that it must have pained the defendant listening to it.
The defendant, on the other hand, did not impress me as credible. He
occasionally contradicted himself and his evidence does not accord
with that of his son in a number of respects. He, for example,
denied that he had spoken to his son after the latter had returned
from the scene. His son, on the other hand, testified that he had
informed the defendant upon his return that he had brought the beast
along and that the defendant had said to him that he no longer had
cattle on the farms and that, because it was late, the workers and
dogs could have the meat the next day. His evidence is also not
supported by the probabilities: He did not bother to inform the
police that the carcass had been removed by his son in error or
offered to have it or the skin returned for ownership to be
established; he apparently did not inform his wife at any time
before the collision that he had removed his cattle (otherwise she
would not have responded the way she did); neither did he inform his
son nor Von Dewitz, etc.. I am satisfied that the evidence
establishes on a balance of probabilities that the defendant was
still the lessee of the farms on the date of the collision and the
he had a legal duty to maintain the fences running parallel with the
road in the vicinity where the collision occurred.
I am also satisfied that the defendant was the owner of the cow
involved in the collision. According to the Plaintiff and Traffic
Officer Simon, Defendant’s son, who, on his own admission, was
specifically sent out by Defendant’s wife to investigate whether
it was one of their cattle, admitted on the scene that the cow was
“theirs”. The plaintiff, who was apparently alive to the
importance of ownership to any future claim to recover his damages,
insisted during his evidence that if Theron Jr had not admitted
ownership outright, he would have insisted on the hide of the beast
being impounded to examine the brand mark thereon and identify the
owner. The admission of the defendant’s son made in the presence
of Officer Simon was the reason why he had been allowed to remove
the carcass. I find it quite cynical that, after having removed and
consumed or discarded the carcass, ownership thereof is denied for
the first time when the plaintiff demanded payment of his damages on
12 September 2002. Once they realised that
the cow did not belong to the Defendant, why was the police not
informed without delay and directions obtained from them? It would
still have been possible at that stage to look for a brand mark. Why
did the defendant not look for and note the brand mark
if, as he testified, he knew from the outset that it was not one of
his cattle? I do not for a moment believe that the plaintiff would
have allowed the severance and removal the hindquarters of the
carcass before the arrival of the defendant’s son. It seems to me
more likely that the son’s evidence to that effect is an invention
in anticipation of uncomfortable questions about having failed to
look for a brand mark on the hindquarters (where it must by law be
applied) after he had “realised” it was not one of their cows.
I also reject his denial that there were other cattle next to the
road and that he was directed to remove them by officer Simon.
Officer Simon had no interest in the matter and I did not get the
impression that he slanted his evidence to favour any of the
parties. I find his evidence both credible and reliable. His
evidence corroborates that of the Plaintiff on the point. As a
matter of fact, the presence of the other animals next to the road
was specifically mentioned by Plaintiff to the Defendant’s wife
during the telephone conversation he had with her shortly after the
accident. This was not denied. By comparison, the evidence of
defendant’s son did not strike me as credible. He was a poor
witness. I find on the probabilities (not that it cannot be put
higher) that his denial of the presence of other cattle next to the
road was to avoid uncomfortable questions about their ownership;
into which camps he had them herded; which brand marks they had and
the like. It stands to reason that proven ownership of those cattle
would have strongly suggested ownership of the one which had caused
the collision. Given his discomfort and demeanour in Court and the
inconsistencies and improbabilities inherent in his evidence and in
comparison with others, I find that important parts of his evidence
were devised in an attempt to extract the defendant from the
damaging effect to the latter’s asserted defence brought about by
his acknowledgement of ownership on the scene of the accident. I
reject it and find that it has been established on a balance of
probabilities that the cow belonged to the defendant – and not to
Tsuseb or any other person as he suggested.
By reason of the defendant’s legal tenancy and factual occupation
of the farms adjacent to the road in the area where the collision
with the cow occurred; the interests of society to create a safe
driving environment for motorists along fenced-off public roads, the
defendant had a legal duty to effectively limit the movement of his
cattle by properly and regularly maintaining the fence separating
the road from the grazing areas on the farms adjacent to the road
where the collision occurred. Failure to comply with this legal duty
is unlawful.
The next enquiry is whether the defendant was
negligent in failing to take those measures, thus causing or
contributing to the collision. The plaintiff has the onus
to prove negligence and causation on a
balance of probabilities
and bears that burden throughout the trial.
The evidence establishes on a balance of probabilities that
the defendant occupied the farms immediately adjacent to the road
where the collision occurred; that the defendant had a legal duty to
maintain the fences on those farms running alongside the road; that
the duty to maintain the fences by necessary implication requires
close inspections at reasonable intervals to detect and repair
defects or damage to them; that the same applies to swing gates
installed in those fences;
that the cow with which the plaintiff collided was the property of
the defendant; that the defendant had the duty to take reasonable
measures to restrict the movement of the cow so as to prevent it
from straying onto the road and that there were about 14 other head
of cattle close to the road in the same area.
In addition, the plaintiff testified that the 5 strand fence in that
area had many broken droppers and was in a poor state of repair.
Although the evidence of the Defendant and his son was to the effect
that the fences on the farms were generally well maintained, I did
not understand any one of them to testify that he had conducted a
close inspection of the fences near the scene of the collision
shortly after the event. The suggestion by the defendant that he
drove past there at a later stage and saw nothing wrong must be
qualified by his later admission that one is unlikely to spot
defects if driving along on the road at speed. In any event, I
consider the Plaintiff credible and accept his evidence regarding
the condition of the fence.
Understandably, the plaintiff could not say when or how it came
about that the cattle got into the road reserve or when the fence
had last been inspected or repaired, but, in my view, he took the
case as far as could have been reasonably expected of him and the
cumulative effect of the aforementioned proven facts is such that it
establishes at least a prima facie case of negligence against
the defendant. When last the fence was inspected or repaired, by
whom and what the nature of the repairs was, are all facts
exclusively within the defendant’s knowledge. The weight of the
plaintiff’s case created for the defendant an evidentiary duty to
rebut the inferences of negligence and causation otherwise to be
drawn from it.
The defendant’s difficulty is self-inflicted: he shot himself in
the foot by the defence he proffered on the other issues in the
case, i.e. that of occupation of the farms and ownership of the cow.
According to him, he vacated the farms by no later than 22 April
2002 – a month before the incident. From that date onwards,
according to him, he had no further interest in the farms or any
duty to maintain the fences. Hence, any assertion that he had
inspected the fences at any time during the month before the
collision would have sounded rather contrived. As it were, the best
he could do was to limp along with his testimony that he had last
inspected the fences in question “a week or so” before he had
left and that the fences had been in a good condition. By his own
admission, he inspected the fences more than a month before the
collision. That, in my view, falls significantly short of what a
reasonable person would have done in the circumstances: A reasonable
person in the position of the defendant would have foreseen that if
the fences were not properly maintained and the gates adequately
secured, cattle may stray onto the road causing accidents with
resultant damages for road users and, therefore, would have taken
reasonable steps to maintain and secure the fences and gates. This
said, I hasten to note that I accept that the materials used in the
construction of a fence, the design, nature and purpose of the fence
and the age thereof are all factors which must be considered in
determining the frequency with which one may reasonably require a
landowner to inspect those running along a public road. I am
therefore hesitant to lay down a measure which may be applied out of
context in other cases. Suffice it to say that, with what appears to
be an ordinary “government standard” 5 strand fence next to an
important public road (such as the one between Okahandja and
Karibib), one may reasonably expect inspections to be done more
frequently than with one month intervals.
Given the basis of his defence, the defendant could not even say
that he had searched for or identified the possible cause for
cattle’s intrusion into the road reserve. The best his son could
do was to speculate about different causes. Speculation, however,
does little to discharge the duty to rebut.
The defendant’s failure to rebut the prima facie case that
he was negligent in failing to effectively limit the movement of his
cattle by properly and regularly maintaining the fence separating
the road and adjacent farming area, justifies the conclusion that
the plaintiff established negligence on a balance of probabilities.
The final enquiry relates to causation and contributory negligence.
According to the plaintiff, he was driving from Windhoek to his farm
near Wilhelmstal along the Okahandja-Karibib road. He had building
materials on his vehicle and the trailer it was a towing. It was
already after the sun had set when he negotiated an incline about 50
kilometers West of Okahandja at a speed of approximately 100 km/h.
It was almost dark and he had already switched the headlights of his
vehicle on. As his vehicle came over the summit of the rise, the
beams of the headlights suddenly fell on a black cow in the middle
of the road crossing it from left to right. He estimated the
distance between his vehicle and the cow when he had seen it for the
first time to be about 15 to 20 meters. At the speed he was driving,
time before the collision did not even allow him to take evasive
action. His vehicle collided with the cow, causing extensive damage
to the right front section of the car. His evidence that his vehicle
impacted with the cow approximately 20 meters from the summit of the
rise was confirmed by Officer Simon. Simon was on patrol and the
first to arrive at the scene.
Whilst I accept that the rise was such that a driver may not be able
to see beyond the summit if still at a distance, I am somewhat
surprised that the plaintiff could not see further than 20 meters
ahead of him as he approached and crossed the summit. No
measurements have been taken and, without evidence to the contrary
or an inspection in loco, I am unable to conclude that the
plaintiff failed to keep a proper lookout or that he could have
taken evasive action and that, consequently, he was partly or wholly
to be blamed for the collision.
I am therefore constrained to conclude that the evidence as a whole
establishes on a balance of probabilities that the defendant’s
unlawful and negligent failure to take reasonable measures to
prevent his cattle from straying onto the road was the sole cause of
the collision and the damages suffered by the plaintiff.
In the result, the defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff -
1. the sum of N$31 656.10;
2. interest on the sum of N$31 656.10 from the date of judgment to
the date of payment calculated at the rate of 20% p.a. and
3. costs of suit.
MARITZ, J.
ON BEHALF OF THE PLAINTIFF: Mr. Z.J. Grobler
Instructed
by: Andre Louw & Co
ON
BEHALF OF DEFENDANT: Mr. J. Schickerling
Instructed by: Fisher, Quarmby & Pfeiffer