FAULT
FAULT
1. Did the defendant, at the time the delict was committed, have the mental
capacity to distinguish between right and wrong and appreciate the
difference?
2. Did the defendant, at the time the delict was committed, have sufficient
maturity to act in accordance with the appreciation of a distinction between
right and wrong?
1. Youth:
• Children who are younger than 7 years old (infantes) are irrebuttably
presumed to be of culpa incapax (without legal capacity) and will always
lack legal accountability, irrespective of the child's actual mental capacity.
• Children between the ages of 7 and 14 years old - there is a rebuttable
presumption that these children are culpae incapax, therefore, unless it is
proven otherwise, these children are regarded as legally incapable of being
blamed.
• Children between the ages of 14 and 18 years of age - children in this
category are presumed to be culpae capax and unless proven otherwise,
these children are legally accountable and liable for their wrongful conduct.
• If at the time of the alleged delict, the wrongdoer suffers from any mental
illness or disease, or emotional distress which renders him or her incapable
of distinguishing between right and wrong, or acting in accordance with an
understanding of the distinction between right and wrong.
• In S v Campher it was confirmed that the person must have failed to control
the impulse to commit the act in issue and that the lack of control must have
arisen from an 'infirmity of will for which he was not answerable'.
3. Intoxication:
4. Provocation:
Learning Outcome 3: Discuss how the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 changed the
common law position with regard to the accountability of children (VC learn):
• Infans (0-7 years old) - there is an irrebuttable presumption of doli incapax
which means they can never have legal capacity.
• Impubes (7+ - 14 years old) - there is a rebuttable presumption of doli
incapax , meaning that they can be proven to have capacity.
• 14 - 18 years old are culpa capax. They are considered to be adults in
respect of accountability and unless proven otherwise, they are legally
accountable.
Forms of intention:
1. Dolus directus
2. Dolus indirectus
3. Dolus eventualis
Requirements/elements/components of intention:
1. Direction of will:
• Requires that a person must have aimed to achieve a certain result, or at
least must have been willing to produce or accept the consequences that
might result.
• A person may direct their will:
• Directly (dolus directus)
• Indirectly (dolus indirectus)
• By accepting then possibility of other harmful consequences ensuing (dolus
eventualis)
2. Consciousness of wrongfulness:
• Requires that when a person directs his or her will towards achieving a
desired consequence, that person must know that the conduct and the
ensuing consequences are contrary to law and the legal convictions of
society.
• If someone genuinely believes that he or she is acting in accordance with the
law, he or she has not acted intentionally for the purposes of the law.
• If any component is absent or cannot be proved, there is no intention.
Intention Motive
Learning Outcome 7: Discuss the test used to establish negligence as set out in
Kruger v Coetzee 1966:
One:
• Place a reasonable person in the same position as the defendant
Two:
• Evaluate the situation and circumstances to see whether a reasonable person
in the defendant's position would have foreseen the possibility of harm
arising from the conduct.
• If a reasonable person would have foreseen that the relevant conduct might
cause harm, then one can move to the next issue.
Three:
• Would a reasonable person have done anything to prevent the harm from
occuring if the conduct continued.
• One must assess what steps were available to the defendant in the particular
circumstances. This is done by assessing the availability of alternative steps
that would have prevented harm, and whether they were reasonable and
practical in then circumstances.
• If then defendant did take some measures to prevent the harm, then plaintiff
must show that such measures were either unreasonable or inadequate, with
reference to what a reasonable person would have done in the
circumstances.
Four:
• Compare the defendant's conduct to the course of action that the court
thinks a reasonable person would have taken in the circumstances.
• If it appears that the defendant did nothing, or did less than what a
reasonable person would have, the defendant's conduct was 'sub-standard'
or unreasonable and therefore negligent
• Gross negligence refers to a reckless and culpable disregard for the safety
and well-being of others, resulting in harm or damage.
• In the case of Kruger vs Coetzee gross negligence was defined as a reckless
and wanton disregard for the safety of others, amounting to a breach of a
duty of care which a reasonable man would observe in the circumstances.
Negligence of Children:
• Before 1965 the reasonable child test was conducted in order to determine
whether a child was negligent.
• In 1965 the Appellate Division in the Jones case established a new approach
which stipulated that in determining whether a child acted negligently:
• it must be ascertained whether the child concerned met the standard of care
required of a reasonable person.
• if the child did not meet the requirements of the first test, it must be asked
whether the child was culpae capax.
Negligence of Experts:
Wrongfulness Negligence
Contributory Fault
• a plaintiff's conduct contributed to the harm they suffered
• common law position-fault on the part of the plaintiff precludes him from
claiming damages from the defendant, who was also to blame for the
causing of the damage. If 2 people were at fault, neither could claim
damages unless one was more to blame than the other.
LO18: Briefly distinguish between fault and contributory fault.
LO25: Describe consent to the risk of injury and contributory intent in relation
to Netherlands Insurance v Van der Vyver 1968 1 SA 412 (A).
• In the Van der Vyver case, Van der Vyvers decision to ride with an intoxicated
driver was seen as an intentional acceptance of a known risk.By getting into
the car, Van der Vyver contributed to the circumstances that led to his injury.
The court needed to assess whether Van der Vyver's decision to ride with
Marais amounted to contributory intent. This required proving that he
consciously chose to expose himself to the danger.The court determined
that Van der Vyver's actions did exhibit contributory intent, as he knowingly
exposed himself to the risk of injury by riding with an intoxicated driver.
• The finding of contributory intent meant that Van der Vyver's claim for
damages was affected. The court ruled that his intentional behavior in
accepting the risk reduced the insurer's liability.
Learning Outcome 14: With reference to case law, describe the four
factors that make up the preventability leg of the negligence test:
Learning Outcome 16: Describe the effect of the res ipsa loquitor
• Res ipsa loquitur maxim translated means "the thing speaks for itself"and has
a significant effect on the burden of proof in certain cases.
• It is a doctrine that infers negligence or liability based on the circumstances
of a case, where:
1. The event is of a type that doesn't normally occur without negligence.
2. The defendant had exclusive control over the thing or instrument that
caused the harm.
3. The plaintiff didn't contribute to the harm.