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Foreseeability : wrongfulness and negligence of omissions in delict – the debate goes on - MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd v Swart NO 2017 5 SA 76 (SCA)

The case under discussion involved delictual liability for an omission. The appellant sued the respondent for damages, alleging that the respondent’s negligent omissions had caused or allowed a fire to spread to a plantation, of which the appellant was the beneficial owner. Relief was refused in the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Tydskrif vir regswetenskap 2018-01, Vol.43 (1), p.145-161
Main Authors: Potgieter, J.M., Neethling, J.
Format: Article
Language:afr ; eng
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Summary:The case under discussion involved delictual liability for an omission. The appellant sued the respondent for damages, alleging that the respondent’s negligent omissions had caused or allowed a fire to spread to a plantation, of which the appellant was the beneficial owner. Relief was refused in the High Court and the appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal was unsuccessful, Leach JA finding that negligence was not proved by the appellant. The most important aspect of Leach JA’s decision was his pronouncement that it is potentially confusing to take foreseeability into account as a factor determining both wrongfulness and negligence. Such confusion could lead to the conflation of these two delictual elements, resulting in wrongfulness losing its important attribute as a measure of control over liability. Accordingly, foreseeability of harm should not be considered in establishing wrongfulness; its role should be confined to the rubrics of negligence and causation. This aspect of the judgment can be supported because it accords with the ex post facto evaluation of wrongfulness, which excludes the utilisation of the ex ante reasonable foreseeability of harm. Be that as it may, until the Constitutional Court confirms Leach JA’s approach to foreseeability and wrongfulness, the question remains as to whether our law will not be impoverished by restricting foreseeability to negligence and legal causation, whilst, in doing so, also disregarding the numerous authoritative judgements acknowledging the role of foreseeability with regard to wrongfulness. Notwithstanding Leach JA’s rejection of the legal duty approach to the wrongfulness of an omission, this approach, which has become engrained in our law of delict, remains very important in establishing wrongfulness in the present field. As a matter of fact, Leach JA himself relied on previous decisions that applied the legal duty approach and also acknowledged the legal duty of a landowner to control or extinguish a fire on its land. However, the judge’s apparent use of negligence in limiting the absoluteness of the legal duty, may cause confusion between wrongfulness and negligence. Leach JA clearly favours the new test for wrongfulness (the reasonableness of holding the defendant liable) in the present context, despite criticism of this test and the fact that it is merely a recent formulation of one variation of the test for wrongfulness. However, there is no indication that the judge specifically applied the new te
ISSN:0258-252X
2415-0517
DOI:10.18820/24150517/JJS43.v1.7