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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Renier Albertus Hermanus Engelbrecht v The Road Accident Fund and The Minister of Transport

Citation(CCT 57/06) [2007] ZACC 1
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Administrative Law
Delict
Motor Vehicle Accident Claims

Facts of the Case

On 22 February 2002, the applicant's vehicle collided with an unidentified truck near Clanwilliam. The applicant was injured and hospitalized for 2-3 days. On 1 March 2002, his attorneys wrote to police about the accident. On 4 May 2002, the applicant submitted an affidavit to police with particulars of the accident. The applicant sued the Road Accident Fund (RAF) for compensation under section 17(1)(b) of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 for injuries caused by the unidentified driver. The RAF defended on the basis that the applicant failed to comply with regulation 2(1)(c), which requires submission of an affidavit to police within 14 days of being in a position to do so. The applicant conceded non-compliance but challenged the constitutionality of regulation 2(1)(c) as violating section 34 of the Constitution (right of access to courts). The Cape High Court dismissed the constitutional challenge and the claim.

Legal Issues

  • Whether a victim of a hit-and-run motorist has a justiciable claim that engages section 34 of the Constitution
  • Whether regulation 2(1)(c) of the Road Accident Fund regulations is consistent with section 34 of the Constitution
  • Whether the limitation imposed by regulation 2(1)(c) is reasonable and justifiable under section 36(1) of the Constitution
  • Whether the Minister had authority under section 26 of the Act to make regulation 2(1)(c)
  • What remedy is appropriate if the regulation is unconstitutional

Judicial Outcome

1. Leave to appeal granted. 2. Appeal upheld with costs including costs of two counsel. 3. Regulation 2(1)(c) declared inconsistent with section 34 of the Constitution and invalid, applicable to all claims under the Road Accident Fund Act that have not prescribed or been finally determined by the date of the order. 4. High Court order set aside; special plea dismissed with costs including two counsel. 5. Case remitted to Cape High Court for determination of the claim.

Ratio Decidendi

A victim of a hit-and-run motorist has a justiciable claim at common law that arises upon injury from wrongful and negligent driving, regardless of whether the driver can be identified. Section 17(1)(b) of the Road Accident Fund Act creates a statutory right to compensation, thereby engaging section 34 of the Constitution. Regulation 2(1)(c), requiring submission of an affidavit within 14 days, constitutes a limitation of the section 34 right. A 14-day period is too short to amount to a 'real and fair' opportunity to access courts, particularly given that most claimants will be unaware of the regulation. The double qualifications in the regulation do not render the period flexible or adequate; they merely operate to suspend or interrupt the running of the period in certain circumstances. To be justified under section 36, a limitation must be proportionate, with evidence of a causal relationship between the measure and its legitimate purpose. Where no such evidence exists, where the measure has admittedly failed to achieve its purpose, and where less restrictive alternatives have not been shown to be unavailable, the limitation cannot be justified even for a legitimate purpose like combating fraud. Regulation 2(1)(c) is therefore inconsistent with section 34 and invalid.

Obiter Dicta

The Court expressed doubt (without deciding) whether the Minister has power under section 26 of the Act to determine by regulation the limitation of time within which a claim may be made or to impose conditions on the institution of an action, having regard to section 16(1) of the Prescription Act and section 3 of the Act (para 25). The Court noted that it is questionable whether regulations can limit enforceability of justiciable claims, but found it unnecessary to pronounce on this issue as there had been no relevant challenge. The Court indicated that as a general principle, an order of invalidity should have no effect on cases finalized prior to the date of the order, applying S v Bhulwana (para 45). Kondile AJ noted that adequacy of a time period must not be tested against truly extraordinary situations (para 38).

Legal Significance

This landmark judgment clarifies that victims of hit-and-run motorists have justiciable common law claims that engage constitutional protections, overturning the SCA's reasoning in Makwetlane. It establishes important jurisprudence on the right of access to courts under section 34, holding that unreasonably short time periods (here 14 days) that effectively nullify constitutional rights cannot be justified even for legitimate purposes like fraud prevention. The judgment demonstrates robust application of the limitations analysis under section 36, requiring proportionality between the limitation and its purpose, and evidence that the measure actually achieves its stated objective. It reinforces that procedural requirements that bar access to justice must be carefully scrutinized, particularly considering their impact on vulnerable, illiterate and poor communities. The decision also addresses the scope of ministerial regulation-making powers, emphasizing that delegated legislation must serve and promote the object of the enabling Act.

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This case references

Applies

  • Fedsure Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and OthersCCT 7/98 [Decided on 14 October 1998]

Cites

  • Fedsure Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and OthersCCT 7/98 [Decided on 14 October 1998]
  • The State v T Makwanyane and M Mchunu1995 (3) SA 391 (CC); 1995 (6) BCLR 665 (CC); CCT/3/94

Referenced by

Cited By

  • Marius Kruger v The President of the Republic of South Africa and Others(CCT 57/07) [2008] ZACC 17
  • Estate Agency Affairs Board v Auction Alliance (Pty) Ltd and Others[2014] ZACC 3
  • University of Stellenbosch Legal Aid Clinic and Others v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others[2016] ZACC 32
  • Barkhuizen v Napier(CCT 72/05) [2007] ZACC 5
  • Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Cecil Tshepo Mokopane Mafate(903/2021) [2023] ZASCA 14 (17 February 2023)
  • Brümmer v Minister for Social Development and Others(CCT 25/09) [2009] ZACC 21
  • Coughlan N.O. v Road Accident Fund[2015] ZACC 9
  • Mvumvu and Others v Minister for Transport and Another(CCT 67/10) [2011] ZACC 1

Considers By

  • Estate Agency Affairs Board v Auction Alliance (Pty) Ltd and Others[2014] ZACC 3

Followed By

  • Brümmer v Minister for Social Development and Others(CCT 25/09) [2009] ZACC 21
  • Road Accident Fund v Vusumzi Mdeyide (Minister for Transport Intervening)(CCT 10/10) [2010] ZACC 18

Related To By

  • Sanoj Jeewan v Transnet SOC Limited and Another(696/2023) [2024] ZASCA 108