Thursday, 25 April, 2024
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RAF not liable for suicide following injuries incurred in accident

The Western Cape High Court has ruled that the Road Accident Fund (RAF) is not liable to cover the loss of income for the family of a motorcyclist who committed suicide after an accident. The claim centred over whether a motorcyclist had taken his own life owing to injuries from an accident. His family claimed for a loss of income due to his death.

News24 reports that the judgment withheld the names of the motorcyclist and his family.

The victim was injured in a collision in 2014. A claim was lodged with the RAF, which was still being finalised two years after the accident, at the time of his death in 2016. Two years after his suicide, the man’s wife approached the RAF with a second claim. She said the injuries sustained by her husband in the accident had caused his suicide, resulting in the loss of income for her and her two children. The court looked to determine whether, had it not been for the orthopaedic injuries sustained during the accident, the man would have taken his own life.

 

Maloney_and_Others_v_Road_Accident_Fund

 

News24 article – Family of motorcyclist who killed himself two years after accident loses case against RAF (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Motorcycle accidents more costly and dangerous

 

Risk factors for suicide over a lifetime — systematic review

 

Statistics SA: How South Africans die

 

 

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