- Court awards R6.4 million after 50 percent apportionment, including general damages and lifetime medical costs.
- Judge rejects use of lower life expectancy tied to income level, finding the approach unfair and discriminatory.
- PRASA must also fund lifelong transport, prosthetics, home assistance, and companion care.
A Gugulethu man who lost his lower leg after being pushed from a moving train has secured a major damages award after the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa was ordered to pay more than R6.4 million for the long-term consequences of his injuries.
Western Cape High Court’s Acting Judge F Moosa held that Aviwe Hopewell Tobi must be compensated for the full reality of life as an amputee, including prosthetic replacements, surgeries, physiotherapy, transport, home help, and loss of earnings.
Crucially, the court refused to reduce his claim by assuming he would live a shorter life because of his income or socio-economic status. The judge described this method as unfair and constitutionally troubling.
The ruling follows a 2013 incident near Bonteheuwel, when Tobi was pushed from a moving Metrorail train and suffered catastrophic injuries, including a below-knee amputation, fractures, grafted wounds, and permanent scarring.
A life permanently altered
Tobi was 25 when the accident happened. He spent seven weeks in hospital and underwent multiple surgeries. Doctors amputated his right leg below the knee and performed skin grafts on his left ankle and foot. Years later, he still experiences pain, limited endurance, and mobility problems.
Medical experts agreed he will never regain normal function. He cannot run, struggles to walk long distances, and will eventually rely partly on a wheelchair. He will need new prosthetic limbs every few years for the rest of his life.
The court recorded that future treatment will likely include further reconstructive surgery, possible ankle fusion surgery, repeated physiotherapy, and ongoing assistive devices.
Judge Moosa accepted that these are not luxuries but necessities flowing directly from the accident. “He suffered severe injuries which caused him physical pain and severe emotional stress,” one medico-legal report noted, a finding the court accepted.
The fight over life expectancy
The most contested issue was not the injuries themselves, but how long Tobi is expected to live.
PRASA’s actuary argued the court should use a modified actuarial life table that links life expectancy to income brackets. Because Tobi’s projected earnings were modest, this method would reduce his expected lifespan and, in turn, cut his future damages. The judge rejected this outright.
He found that both the old apartheid-era tables and newer income-based versions risk unfair discrimination. Using a lower life expectancy because someone is poorer, the court said, undermines equality and dignity.
In one of the judgment’s most important findings, the court held that life tables are only guides and must be adapted to avoid injustice. The judge wrote that courts must avoid “a rigid approach” and ensure results are “contextually appropriate and fair.”
He ultimately fixed Tobi’s life expectancy at 71.5 years, which was longer than PRASA proposed, and this increased the value of future care and prosthetic costs.
What the court awarded
After applying a 50 percent apportionment agreed between the parties, the court ordered PRASA to pay R6 407 053.60.
This includes general damages for pain, suffering, disfigurement, and loss of amenities of life; past and future loss of earnings; and millions for future medical and related expenses, such as prosthetics, surgeries, and therapy.
The judge awarded R1.85 million for general damages alone, noting that the accident struck when Tobi was “in the full bloom of life” and permanently curtailed his independence.
Transport and daily living support
The court also recognised the everyday realities of living with a disability. PRASA must pay for Tobi’s transport to medical appointments. For most of his life, costs will be calculated using Golden Arrow Bus Services fares. In the last two decades of his life, when he is expected to slow down further, private rides, such as Uber, had to be funded.
A companion must also be paid to accompany him to appointments. The court ordered payment for home maintenance help and later-life domestic assistance, recognising that heavy tasks like lifting, cleaning, and repairs are now beyond him.
A judgment with wider impact
Judge Moosa warned against methods that effectively value poorer lives as shorter and cheaper to compensate. He stressed that constitutional rights to equality and dignity must inform how actuarial tools are used.
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