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Exam (elaborations)

LPL4802 May/June Exam Memo | Due 29 May 2025

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LPL4802 May/June Exam Memo | Due 29 May 2025. All questions fully answered with referencing. QUESTION 1 [15 marks] Critically discuss Ngubane v RAF 2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ), a copy of which is provided for your reference. Your answer must clearly demonstrate that you have read and understood the case. Marking criteria Marks will be awarded as follows: • Facts of the case (2), • Legal question (1), • Judgment and ratio decidendi (10), • Stating whether you agree/disagree with the judgment and provide specific reason(s) for your answer (2). QUESTION 2 [15 marks] James, a wealthy and well-known businessman, was unlawfully arrested by the police after a tip-off from an informer that he was part of a gang that was involved in an ATM bombing. As it was dark, James was wrongly identified as a member of the gang. While being detained, James shouted at the police, calling them a bunch of lawless idiots and threatening to get back at them. After his unlawful arrest, he was detained for 48 hours (from Friday evening to Sunday evening) before he was released. Since James is a wealthy and well-known businessman in the area, news of his arrest quickly reached the media, who arrived at the police station where James was being detained to report on his arrest. Advise him in detail whether he may institute an action and how his claim will be assessed. QUESTION 3 [25 marks] Read the facts below and answer the questions that follow: 3.1 What is the overriding philosophy of the law of contract and how would this impact the agreement between Jacob and Kagiso? (3) 3.2 Explain whether Jacob meets the requirements to institute a claim for damages for breach of contract against Kagiso. (4) 3.3 What remedy is available to Jacob in terms of the principles of the law of contract? Will Jacob be able to claim any monetary compensation from Kagiso? If so, to what amount will he be entitled? Refer to a decided case to substantiate your answer. In one sentence, state what the court held in this case. (6) 3.4 Will Jacob be able to claim the R320 000 from Kagiso for loss of income for the planned hiring out of the padel courts and the planned padel lessons? (3) 3.5 Distinguish between those damages that are intrinsic/general and those that are extrinsic/special. Give a detailed explanation of each. (9) QUESTION 4 [35 marks] Read the facts below and answer the questions that follow: 4.1 Nyla wants to know from you, her attorney, whether she has a claim for damages. Indicate in table form which claims Nyla has. (This question should not be answered in essay format, but on the table that is provided to you.) In your answer you must identify the claim that can be instituted, indicate the type of claim (i.e., under which category the claim falls), whether it will fall under general or special damages and, finally, the amount. Please include calculations, where applicable, as marks will be awarded for this. (30) 4.2 Use the same set of facts, but now assume that Nyla was not the passenger but the driver of the vehicle at the time of the accident. During the trial, the court held that Nyla was 30% negligent. Explain in detail how this will affect the award for damages that she may claim from the Road Accident Fund (RAF). Show detailed calculations, as marks will also be awarded for all calculations. (5) QUESTION 5 [10 marks] 5.1 Explain the relationship between an attorney and his or her client in detail. (3) 5.2 Suppose an attorney has been appointed as the executor of an estate. However, because of his negligence, the heirs lose their inheritance. Will the attorney be liable for damages to the heirs in his capacity as attorney? Answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ and briefly explain your answer. (1) 5.3 Suppose an attorney gives his client the assurance that they will win a particular case. However, it turns out that he made an error of judgement. Will the attorney be liable for damages based on negligence? Answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ and briefly explain your answer. (2) 5.4 After Elijah was involved in a motor vehicle accident that left him a paraplegic, he instructed his attorney, Wesley, to claim compensation from the Road Accident Fund (RAF). Elijah’s claim amounted to R2 000 000. However, Wesley forgot about the case. After the claim had prescribed, he informed Elijah about it. Does Elijah have a claim against Wesley? Answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ and briefly explain your answer. 5.5 Suppose an attorney provides advice to his clients about a property that they are interested in purchasing. The clients purchase the property on his advice and pay R 2 400 000. Later, it turns out that the advice received from the attorney about the property is incorrect and that the property is worth R 2 000 000. How will damages be calculated? Explain and provide the calculation. (2) [TOTAL MARKS FOR THE PAPER: 100]

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Uploaded on
May 23, 2025
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, PLEASE USE THIS DOCUMENT AS A GUIDE TO ANSWER YOUR ASSIGNMENT

 QUESTION 1

1. Critically discuss Ngubane v RAF 2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ), a copy of which is provided for your
reference. Your answer must clearly demonstrate that you have read and understood the case.

Critical Discussion of Ngubane v Road Accident Fund 2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ)
The case of Ngubane v Road Accident Fund presented the Gauteng High Court with a legally
complex and morally significant issue regarding the transmissibility of general damages after the
death of a plaintiff. Central to the dispute was the intersection between long-standing common law
principles, evolving constitutional jurisprudence, and the practical need to offer remedies to the
estates of deceased claimants. The judgment delivered offers a thorough exploration of these
dynamics, ultimately reaffirming the constraints on judicial development of common law in the
absence of direct constitutional conflict.

Facts of the Case
On 27 February 2019, Simphiwe Bongayiphi Ngubane was involved in a motor vehicle collision and
subsequently instituted an action against the Road Accident Fund (RAF) for general damages on 11
August 2020. The RAF was served with the summons on 14 August 2020 but failed to respond,
leading to an uncontested default judgment application. Before the matter could progress, Ngubane
passed away on 25 February 2021. The executor of his estate was substituted as plaintiff, and the
court was asked to determine whether the general damages claim could survive Ngubane’s death.
Although procedural compliance with the RAF Act was established and liability on the part of the
RAF was accepted due to the unopposed evidence, the court was compelled to consider whether the
estate had a valid claim to general damages under these circumstances1.

Legal Question
The legal issue at the heart of the dispute was whether a claim for general damages survives the
death of a plaintiff who passes away prior to the point of litis contestatio, and can thus be transmitted
to the estate for continuation by the executor1.

Judgment and Ratio Decidendi
The court dismissed the general damages claim, holding that the estate had no legal right to pursue it.
Although the RAF was found fully liable for any proven damages, no compensable damage could be
awarded because general damages were the only claim made. At the core of the court’s reasoning
was the affirmation of a long-standing common law rule that general damages claims are not
transmissible if the plaintiff dies before litis contestatio—generally synonymous with the close of
pleadings. In this matter, since the RAF had never filed a notice of intention to defend or delivered
any pleadings, litis contestatio had not occurred prior to the Plaintiff's death1. While the court
explored the Roman-Dutch law notion of "fictitious joinder" due to the defendant's failure to defend,
it found this doctrine inapplicable as a default judgment had not yet been granted at the time of
death.




1: Ngubane v Road Accident Fund (2020/20008) [2022] ZAGPJHC 275; 2022 (5) SA 231 (GJ) (26 April 2022).

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