Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 744South Africa
Mobile Complete (PTY) Limited v RAM Transport (South Africa) (PTY) Limited (1746/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 744 (6 October 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – Exception to particulars of claim – plaintiff contends that particulars of claim are vague and embarrassing and do not disclose cause of action – the court will accept, as true, the allegations pleaded by the plaintiff – it must be demonstrated that upon any construction of the particulars, no cause of action is disclosed – exception dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mobile Complete (PTY) Limited v RAM Transport (South Africa) (PTY) Limited (1746/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 744 (6 October 2022)
Mobile Complete (PTY) Limited v RAM Transport (South Africa) (PTY) Limited (1746/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 744 (6 October 2022)
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sino date 6 October 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
1746/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
6
th
October
2022
In the matter between:
MOBILE
COMPLETE (PTY)
LIMITED
Plaintiff
And
RAM
TRANSPORT (SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LIMITED
Defendant
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
3 October 2022
Delivered:
6 October 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII
. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00
on 6 October 2022.
Summary:
Civil procedure – Exception to
particulars of claim – plaintiff contends that particulars of
claim are vague and embarrassing
and do not disclose cause of action
–
the court
will accept, as true, the allegations pleaded by the plaintiff
–
it must be demonstrated that
upon
any construction of the particulars, no cause of action is disclosed
– exception dismissed.
ORDER
(1)
The defendant’s exception to the
particulars of plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
The parties
shall be referred to as referred to in the main action, in which the
plaintiff sues the defendant for damages on the
basis of an
‘insurance agreement’, which related to and was ancillary
to a ‘Courier & Logistics Services
Agreement’
concluded between the parties on 3 April 2019.
[2].
In its amended
particulars of claim, the plaintiff pleads that the ‘insurance
agreement’, concluded between the parties
on 8 April 2019, was
constituted by a series of emails between them. In terms of this
agreement, so the plaintiff avers, the defendant
agreed to provide
insurance cover from 9 April 2019 in respect of the courier services
rendered by the defendant to the plaintiff
pursuant to the
aforementioned ‘Courier & Logistics Agreement’ of 3
April 2019.
[3].
The insurance
was to be provided, so it is pleaded by the plaintiff, on the
following terms and conditions: the plaintiff would
put the cost
price / replacement value on the waybill for the insurance amount;
all claims would be paid exclusive of value added
tax; no excess fee
would be charged on claims; the plaintiff would provide an invoice
for the items involved in a claim; should
the plaintiff solicit the
defendant's goods in transit (‘GIT’) liability cover, a
loss letter would be sent and the
defendant would then request an
invoice from the plaintiff for payment of the claim; all claims were
to be processed and paid as
soon as all documents were received and
signed off by the managing director of the defendant; and the
insurance premium would be
an amount of 0.4% of the value of the
goods couriered from time to time; with payment of the insurance
premiums being payable after
the courier services had been rendered
and thirty days after a month-end statement was provided by the
defendant.
[4].
This
‘insurance agreement’, as pleaded by the plaintiff in its
particulars of claim, appears to fly in the face of the
written
‘Courier & Logistics Agreement’, in terms of which
the defendant provided to the plaintiff logistics and
courier
services and which, from 3 April 2019, seemingly regulated the
contractual relationship between the parties. This agreement,
a copy
of which is annexed to the particulars of claim, is common cause, and
provides that should the plaintiff require insurance,
same shall only
become applicable in terms of a separate quotation which is to be
reduced to writing and incorporated in a separate
agreement signed by
both parties. The agreement further provides that such liability
option shall only be available to a customer
who has completed an
application to enter a Master Logistics Agreement (‘MLA’)
and a Service Level Agreement (‘SLA’)
which application
was to be successfully approved and signed by both the plaintiff and
the defendant in writing.
[5].
The plaintiff
gets around these requirements by pleading that the initial ‘Courier
& Logistics Agreement’ dated
3 April 2019, which came into
existence after the defendant accepted its (the plaintiff’s)
application to enter into such
agreement, was in fact also an MLA as
well as an SLA. In the exception the defendant argues that that
cannot be so. I’ll
revert to this aspect of the matter shortly.
[6].
In the
alternative, the plaintiff pleads the aforegoing terms and conditions
were for the benefit of the defendant, who waived its
rights under
those terms.
[7].
The defendant excepts to the plaintiff’s
amended particulars of claim on the basis that it is vague and
embarrassing, alternatively,
that it does not disclose a cause of
action. And the grounds of the exception are set out in the
paragraphs which follow.
[8].
But before I
consider
the exception raised by the defendant and the grounds on which it is
based
, it is necessary to have a
brief overview of the applicable general principles relating to
exceptions. These general principles, as gleaned from the case
law,
can be summarised as follows.
[9].
In considering
an exception that a pleading does not sustain a cause of action, the
court will accept, as true, the allegations
pleaded by the plaintiff
to assess whether they disclose a cause of action. The object of an
exception is not to embarrass one’s
opponent or to take
advantage of a technical flaw, but to dispose of the case or a
portion thereof in an expeditious manner, or
to protect oneself
against an embarrassment which is so serious as to merit the costs
even of an exception.
[10].
The purpose of
an exception is to raise a substantive question of law which may have
the effect of settling the dispute between
the parties. If the
exception is not taken for that purpose, an excipient should make out
a very clear case before it would be
allowed to succeed. An excipient
who alleges that a pleading does not disclose a cause of action or a
defence must establish that,
upon any construction of the pleading,
no cause of action or defence is disclosed.
[11].
An
over-technical approach should be avoided because it destroys the
usefulness of the exception procedure, which is to weed out
cases
without legal merit. Pleadings must be read as a whole and an
exception cannot be taken to a paragraph or a part of a pleading
that
is not self-contained. Minor blemishes and insignificant
embarrassments caused by a pleading can and should be cured by
further
particulars.
[12].
Having said
the aforegoing, however, exceptions are to be dealt with sensibly
since they provide a useful mechanism to weed out
cases without legal
merit. An over-technical approach destroys their utility and insofar
as interpretational issues may arise,
the mere notional possibility
that evidence of surrounding circumstances may influence the issue
should not necessarily operate
to debar the Court from deciding an
issue on exception.
[13].
That then brings me back to the grounds on
which the defendant bases its exception.
[14].
Firstly, so
the defendant contends, in terms of the initial agreement between the
parties, if the plaintiff intended applying for
the defendant’s
insurance cover, it (the plaintiff) was required to contact the
defendant’s insurance division, who
would conduct a risk
assessment in relation to the plaintiff and the courier services to
be rendered at its instance. Accordingly,
so the exception reads
further, the plaintiff agreed that no insurance or other form of
liability would be extended to it and the
defendant would not be
liable for any loss, whether such loss arises in contract, delict or
otherwise.
[15].
This
agreement, so this ground of exception is concluded, contains the
entire and only agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant.
And therefore, as per clause 6.1, under the heading ‘Risk –
No Liability’, the defendant only accepted liability
for any
physical loss of or damage to a shipment resulting from the gross
negligence of the defendant, occurring while the Shipment
is in the
actual possession of the defendant, which shall be deemed not to
include any period of time the shipment is in the care,
custody or
control of any designated private or commercial air carrier or
airlines.
[16].
In sum, the
first ground of exception is that, having regard to the aforegoing
provisions of the ‘entire and only agreement’
between the
parties, the plaintiff was required to plead that: (1) it completed
an application to conclude a MLA and a SLA with
the defendant; (2) it
contacted the defendant’s insurance division and requested and
was furnished with a risk assessment;
and (3) it applied for and was
granted a separate quotation which was.
[17].
The
plaintiff’s riposte to this ground is that it did in fact plead
compliance with these conditions – it pleaded (rightly
or
wrongly) that the ‘Courier and Logistics Agreement’
doubled as the MLA and the SLA. Whether this is in fact so is
irrelevant, because, for purposes of an exception, the allegations
pleaded must be accepted as true. Furthermore, so the plaintiff
submits, they have pleaded the other requirement to bring into
existence the insurance cover, notably the agreement on a quotation
in respect of such insurance cover. This was incorporated in the
trail of emails between the parties.
[18].
I agree with
these submissions on behalf of the plaintiff. The point is simply
that the particulars of plaintiff’s claim can
reasonably be
interpreted as sustaining a cause of action based on the provisions
of the original ‘Courier & Logistics
Agreement’. In
other words, plaintiff has pleaded that an ‘insurance
agreement’ as contemplated by the said agreement
had been
concluded. The defendant says that that is patently false. I
reiterate that, in considering the defendant’s exception
that
the particulars of claim do not sustain a cause of action, the court
has to accept, as true, the allegations pleaded by the
plaintiff,
which, in my view, does indeed disclose a cause of action. Moreover,
it cannot be said that upon any construction of
the particulars of
claim, no cause of action or defence is disclosed.
[19].
This first
ground of exception should therefore fail.
[20].
The second
ground of exception raised by the defendant relates to the fact that
there is a contradiction in the plaintiff’s
cause in that at
the outset the plaintiff indicated, in writing, that it did not
require any insurance or liability for goods in
transit. The
plaintiff fails to allege, so the defendant avers, that it required
liability insurance when it completed its application
to enter the
agreement initially. This submission is misguided. It is the case of
the plaintiff that subsequent to the conclusion
of the initial
agreement, the insurance agreement was entered into. Therefore, this
ground of exception should also fail.
[21].
Lastly, and in
relation to the alternative cause of action based on the defendant’s
waiver of the conditions imposed by the
original agreement, which
were for its benefit, the defendant complains that the plaintiff had
failed to allege that the defendant
decided to abandon its rights and
conveyed that decision to the plaintiff. This ground of exception is
stillborn, simply because
these allegations are implicit in the
averment by the plaintiff that the defendant ‘waived’ its
rights in terms of
these conditions. Moreover, this point seems to me
to be of an overly-technical nature.
[22].
In sum, the
onus is on the defendant to prove that, on every reasonable
interpretation thereof, the particulars of plaintiff’s
claim
are excipiable. The defendant has failed to discharge such onus.
[23].
For all of
these reasons, the defendant’s exception appears to be
ill-advised and falls to be dismissed.
Costs
[24].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[1]
.
[25].
Applying this general rule, the defendant
should be ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs of the exception
and the exception
application.
Order
[26].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The defendant’s exception to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim is dismissed with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
3
rd
October 2022
JUDGMENT
DATE:
6
th
October 2022 – handed down
electronically.
FOR THE PLAINTIFF /
RESPONDENT:
Advocate Danie
Combrink
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Moumakoe Clay Incorporated,
Fourways
FOR
THE DEFENDANT / EXCIPIENT:
Advocate Adam Berkowitz
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Werksmans Attorneys, Sandton
[1]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455;
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