Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 918South Africa
Transnet SOC Limited v Santam Limited (30445/2014) [2022] ZAGPJHC 918 (9 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 November 2022
Headnotes
with the Director-General of the Department of Environmental Affairs. In March 2011, Mr Khaled, an acting security manager of Transnet, produced a report furnishing details of the occurrence. Restoration and clean-up operations began and in that context:
Judgment
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## Transnet SOC Limited v Santam Limited (30445/2014) [2022] ZAGPJHC 918 (9 November 2022)
Transnet SOC Limited v Santam Limited (30445/2014) [2022] ZAGPJHC 918 (9 November 2022)
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sino date 9 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTEMG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 30445/2014
REPORTABLE:NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:YES
REVISED:
YES
09/11/2022
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
SOC
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
SANTAM
LIMITED
Defendant
J
U D G M E N T
MASHILE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
I shall refer to the Defendant and Plaintiff in their actual names or
as parties where
context requires that they be mentioned together.
This is a claim for payment emanating from a written insurance
contract (“the
contract”) concluded by the parties on 13
April 2010 at Johannesburg pursuant to which the Defendant signed and
issued a
written insurance policy to the Plaintiff, which duly
conveyed its acceptance thereof. The contract and its terms and
conditions
are not contested by either party but their construal were
at variance obliging them to approach this court for determination.
[2]
Transnet seeks to recover money it has expended in the rehabilitation
of soil contaminated
by aviation fuel escaping from an underground
pipeline belonging to it. Transnet has registered servitude through
the land where
the pipeline is positioned. However, the land that has
been polluted belongs to another party. The pollution happened as a
result
of a deliberate act of unknown individual who excavated a hole
of approximately 1 metre by 1 metre above the pipeline. Once the
pipeline was uncovered, an opening was then made apparently with an
instrument suspected to be a hacksaw. The aviation fuel leaked
into
the 1 Metre by 1 metre hole and formed a type of a pool from which it
could be collected and removed.
[3]
The unknown individuals controlled the outflow from the pipe into the
hole by a rubber
tube, which caused the aviation fuel to slowly
percolate. As the aviation fuel gradually accumulated in the hole,
the unknown individuals
collected the fuel. This process of
collection of the fuel endured as the hole replenished until it was
discovered on 28 January
2011. The leakage allowed fuel to soak the
surrounding soil causing pollution.
[4]
Transnet now alleges that in compliance with its responsibilities
contemplated in
Section 30 of the National Environmental Management
Act of 1998 (“NEMA”), it arranged and paid for the soil
recovery.
These are the costs that Transnet seeks to claim from
Santam under the "Public Liability Section" of the
Insurance Agreement.
However, in consequence of the court order to
treat liability and quantum discretely, which the Court made
following agreement
between the parties that it would be convenient,
this judgment is solely devoted to the former.
FACTUAL MATRIX
[5]
The background facts that gave rise to this claim are primarily a
matter of common
cause. On 13 April 2010, the parties entered into
the contract. The period of cover by the contract was 1 April 2010 to
31 March
2011. On 28 January 2011, the attention of Transnet was
drawn to the ongoing theft of its fuel from the pipeline. The parties
have,
despite being mindful of presence of evidence to the contrary,
agreed to regard 28 January 2011 as both the date of occurrence and
discovery.
[6]
On 31 January 2011, Transnet transmitted an e-mail message followed
by a telephone
call to the Director-General of the Department of
Environmental Affairs advising him of the occurrence. On 18 March
2011, a meeting
was held with the Director-General of the Department
of Environmental Affairs. In March 2011, Mr Khaled, an acting
security manager
of Transnet, produced a report furnishing details of
the occurrence. Restoration and clean-up operations began and in that
context:
6.1 The
clean -up experts delimited the affected area to contain further
contamination. The demarcated area was
not more than 10 metres from
the actual hole from which the fuel had been stolen;
6.2
31 March 2011, Transnet received the first invoice in the amount of
R132 077.10
pertaining to the rehabilitation operations;
6.3 On
1 April 2011, Transnet received a further invoice of
R113 974.87
;
6.4 On
7 April 2011, Transnet notified Santam of the occurrence for the
first time. The total expenses that Transnet
had incurred until then,
as per the two invoices, amounted in all to
R246 051.97
.
[7]
Following the above, the parties, through their relevant
representatives comprising,
their respective insurance brokers,
underwriting managers and the loss adjustor engaged in various
exchanges. These interactions
culminated in a letter of 20 March 2014
by which Santam denied liability under the Insurance Agreement and
excluded the claim of
Transnet.
[8]
Santam states that it is not contested that firstly, no demand was
ever made on Transnet
by the owner of any property that may have been
damaged as a result of the pollution. Secondly, that Santam did not
consent in
writing to Transnet incurring costs in the amount of
approximately
R7.2 million
in dealing with the pollution
and Transnet accepting or agreeing to be responsible or liable for
the costs of dealing with the
pollution.
EVIDENCE
[9]
Transnet called two witnesses, both in its employ, to testify on its
behalf. These
were Mr Pilime (“Pilime”) and Ms Prashika
Mahesh (“Mahesh”). Mr Pilime was the first to take the
stand.
The agreement between the parties that the date of occurrence
and discovery could be assumed to have coincided on 28 January 2011
has largely obviated the need to deal with his testimony extensively.
In large part, Mr Pilime confirmed the factual matrix described
above. As such, I do not see the need to explore what he told this
Court.
[10]
Ms Mahesh was and continues to be responsible for insurance
management at Transnet Pipelines.
She had asked the environmental
Manager, Ms Zondi, to complete a claim form so that she could submit
it to the brokers. The brokers
would, in turn, submit it to the
insurer, Santam. She said that there was no immediate reaction from
Santam following submission
of the claim form but she believed that
it appointed a loss adjustor.
[11]
Once appointed, the loss adjustor met with Ms Zondi, at the location
of the occurrence. Following
this meeting, the loss adjustor
regularly interacted with Ms Zondi. She testified further that she
would submit invoices to the
brokers as and when she received them.
She said that due to the nature of the remedial intervention that had
to be carried out
on the contaminated soil, the period of
communication between the parties concerning this incident became
protracted.
[12]
In consequence, the money that Transnet expended on the treatment of
the soil affected its liquidity
compelling it to ask its brokers to
request Santam to consider making interim payments. Although Santam
confirmed that it would
consider it, ultimately it repudiated the
whole claim on 20 March 2014 being approximately three years from the
date of the occurrence.
She confirmed that the period of three years
was mainly spent interacting with the brokers, sending invoices to
them and the loss
adjustor communicating with Ms Zondi.
[13]
On 14 March 2013, she forwarded an e-mail message to Marius Strydom
advising him that Transnet
was awaiting final costs pertaining to the
rehabilitation of the soil and that such costs would be submitted
once at hand. She
then proceeded to inform him that since Santam had
indicated that it would make interim payments, he could submit all
the invoices
in his possession. Ms Georgia-Groblar wrote advising
Transnet that due to the amount to be paid, the question regarding
interim
payments was still being considered by their legal
department.
[14]
On 7 November 2013, Ms Schalkwyk of Transnet wrote to Ms
Georgeia-Groblar requesting her to establish
from the loss adjustor
if Santam could not make interim payments to Transnet. On 21 November
2013, Ms Georgia-Groblar wrote back
and stated that their head of
legal was on leave returning only on Monday the following week and
that the matter including the
question of interim payments would be
discussed with him then. On 17 December 2013, Ms Georgia-Groblar, in
an email message, advised
that they would not revert until the
following year.
[15]
Ms Mahesh again wrote on 9 January 2014 enquiring about interim
payments and estimated the amount
expended by Transnet until that
time to be
R7.1 Million
.
She explained further that her chief executive was putting a lot of
pressure on them as the expenses were affecting their liquidity.
She
testified that insofar as she was concerned,
Santam
was aware that Transnet was making interim payments to have the soil
rehabilitated and that it did not object or raise any
concerns.
[16]
She said that they continuously enquired from the loss adjustor when
they could expect the report.
The
response she received from
the Loss Adjustor was that a report would only be finalised once
Transnet has submitted its full and
final costs. The impression
created to her by the loss adjustor was that Transnet needed to pay
all the costs of the treatment
of the soil and only then would the
loss adjustor finalise the report, which would be followed by payment
from Santam.
[17]
On
17 January 2014, Rayesha Subalas, an insurance
manager at Transnet Group, sent an email message to Puba Krishna, who
was part of
the Transnet brokers. Rayesha Subalas
asked him to
confirm whether they have made any progress on the issue of interim
payments. In his same day response to the email
message, Puba Krishna
said that they were still waiting on a follow-up that they have made
with Santam. He concluded by undertaking
to revert immediately upon
hearing from Santam.
[18]
On 22 January 2014
Georgia-Groblar wrote to Puba Krishna
stating that they were not in a position to provide a feedback yet.
She explained that Santam
was in the process of reviewing the
information submitted and the requests of interim payments. She
concluded by stating that they
would revert shortly. Puba Krishna
responded on 11 February 2014 wanting to know if Georgia-Groblar had
received any feedback from
the loss adjustor and asked if she could
provide a progress report as Transnet needed it urgently.
[19]
Ms Mahesh stated that these exchanges of correspondence concluded on
20 March 2014 with a letter
of repudiation of the claim. In that
letter Santam neither registered a complaint elating to late
submission of the claim nor did
it protest that Transnet could not
pay for the rehabilitation of the soil without its consent. Ms Mahesh
agreed that the policy
wording stipulates that The claim must be
submitted as soon as is reasonably practicable.
[20]
She stated that to the extent that it might be suggested to her that
the claim could have been
submitted earlier than it was, in less than
two months, she agreed but said that Transnet was waiting for
Reasonable
estimate of the costs before
it
could submit the
claim. She added that even the environment
management report or NEMA Report did not contain any estimated costs
at the time it was
presented to the department.
[21]
The amount of the claim gradually climbed as invoices were being
presented. This took time as
the rehabilitation process was also
drawn-out. Ms Mahesh testified that the last invoice that ultimately
brought the amount to
the claim herein is one presented on 5 April
2014. This concluded the evidence of Ms Mahesh in chief.
[22]
Under cross examination and in response to a question why there were
two separate claim forms,
signed on the same day by two different
individuals, she explained that the repair to the pipelines fell
under the assets portion
of the Insurance while the rehabilitation
costs formed part of the General Liability insurance. Ms Mahesh
agreed that Transnet
claimed
under the assets
policy for the repairs to the pipeline. She did not know whether or
not the assets policy contained a pollution
extension.
[23]
The costs for the repairs to the pipeline were estimated at
R100 000.00
consequently they were effected shortly after
discovery and as a matter of urgency, confirmed Ms Mahesh. She agreed
that it was
not difficult to estimate the costs of repairs to the
damaged pipeline on 7 April 2014 and that it is not a requirement
under the
insurance policy that Transnet had to
wait
until it had reasonable estimation of the clean-up costs.
[24]
Ms Mahesh agreed that on 7 April 2014, the estimated costs for the
rehabilitation of the polluted
area were
R4
million
and that the total ultimately
came to
R7 479 891.72
. Clean-up costs were to be
claimed under General Liability Policy. She agreed that the Transnet
asset policy also had a pollution
extension. That said, she testified
that this specific occurrence would not have fallen under the Assets
Policy because it was
an incident that occurred on a property not
belonging to Transnet and the owner never submitted a claim.
[25]
She testified that the owner of the polluted area did not submit a
claim because NEMA imposes
the obligation to rehabilitate the
contaminated area on Transnet. She stated that Geo Pollution
Technologies furnished Transnet
with estimated costs of the
rehabilitation of the affected area, which on 7 April 2014 was
R4
Million
. She was persistent that the reasonable estimated costs
were not known.
[26]
Transnet only had an estimation of
R4 Million
at that
juncture. She conceded that the policy did not require Transnet to
submit the claim with reliable estimations of the amount.
It was put
to her that the claim could have been submitted earlier than it was.
As such, it is not true that Transnet was waiting
for reasonable
estimations because the policy does not require it.
[27]
Ms Mahesh was then referred to the part of the contract that is
headed: ‘General conditions
applicable to all sections of the
policy’ under which it is stated that Conditions 1 – 5
are precedent to the insurer’s
liability to provide indemnity
under this policy. She was also referred to the contract clause that
reads: ‘
2. The insured shall give written notice to the
insurer as soon as reasonably practicable of any occurrence that may
give rise to
a claim under this policy and shall give all such
additional information as the insurers may require.’
[28]
It was put to Ms Mahesh that there was nothing that prevented
Transnet from notifying its insurers
of the incident as soon as it
was discovered on 28 January 2011. The clause therefore, it was put
to her further, posits Transnet
to first report the incident and the
insurer may thereafter ask for more information that it may need. She
was further referred
to the part dealing with: ‘Primary
Liability Insurance’ and specifically to the clause that reads:
“
The insurers
will indemnify the insured against their liability to pay
compensation (including claimant’s costs, fees and
expenses) …
in accordance with the laws of any country. “.... except and to
the extent and subject to the conditions
specified herein.”
[29]
Ms Mahesh was then shown different parts of the contract dealing with
sections that anticipate
a third party claiming compensation from
Transnet, which it would in turn submit to its insurers as it has
been indemnified in
terms of the contract. This part of the contract
is different insofar as there is no third party who has presented a
claim to Transnet
against which it can be indemnified. This was
somewhat requiring more as such the question was abandoned.
[30]
She conceded that in her entire communication with the insurers there
was never a promise to
make interim payments undertaken by Santam.
All that the insurers advised was that they were discussing the
matter with their head
of legal without any promises that they would
eventually make such payments. She agreed further that her evidence
that provisional
payments were being considered by the insurers was
incorrect. Re-examination of the witness by Transnet accomplished
nothing of
significance.
ISSUES
[31]
From the facts above, this court is required to decide whether or not
t
he rehabilitation costs incurred by Transnet are
recoverable from Santam under the contract. That main issue cannot be
decided independently
and without consider whether or not:
31.1
No
liability arises under the contract for
a purely statutory obligation imposed in terms of NEMA for pollution
rehabilitation costs;
31.2 There was a
sudden unintended and unexpected happening giving rise to the
pollution damage, as contemplated by the insurance
contract;
31.3 Given the date
of the occurrence, 28 January 2011, can the date on which Transnet
notified Santam of the occurrence,
7 April 2011, be accepted as
having been ‘as soon as was reasonably practicable’?
31.4 There was
written consent given by Santam to Transnet making payment of the
rehabilitation costs;
31.5 Assuming that
notice was not given as soon as was reasonably practicable, can
Santam be said to have waived those provisions?
RELEVANT
CONTRACTUAL PROVISIONS
[32]
The controversy in this matter is centred around the contract. As
such, full extracts of the
pertinent parts of the contract require
specific mention. The starting point is Part 1, the ‘General
Operative Clause’.
In this regard, the unnumbered paragraph
immediately following the heading: “General Operative Clause”
states:
“
The
insurers will indemnify the insured against their liability to pay
compensation (including claimants’ costs, fees and
expenses) in
accordance with the law of any country, but not in respect of any
judgment, award or settlement made within countries
which operate
under the laws of the United States of America or Canada (or to any
order made anywhere in the world to enforce such
judgment, award or
settlement either in whole or in part) except to the extent and
subject to the conditions specified herein.”
[33]
Still under General Operative Clause, the contract continues to state
that ‘this indemnity
applies only to such liability as defined
by each Section of this Policy arising out of the Business outlined
in the Schedule,
subject always to the terms, Conditions and
Exclusions of such Section and of the Policy as a whole’.
[34]
Under the heading: ‘Indemnity Limits’, the contract
provides that:
Insurers’ total
liability to pay compensation and/or claimants’ costs, fees,
expenses and Defence costs shall not exceed
the sum stated in the
Schedule against each Section in respect of any one occurrence or
claim or series of occurrences or claims
arising from one originating
cause, but under Sections C, D and E separately the limit applies to
the total amount payable in respect
of the Period of Insurance.”
[35]
Part 2 of the contract bears the heading: ‘General Conditions
Applicable to all Sections
of the Policy’. It provides as
follows:
“
This
Policy does not cover liability: -
1.
arising out of the deliberate,
conscious or intentional disregard by the Insured’s technical
or
administrative
management of the need to take all reasonable steps to prevent loss,
Injury or Damage:
2.
for:
2.1
Injury or Damage or loss of, damage
to, or loss of use of property directly or indirectly caused by
seepage, pollution or contamination,
provided always that this
paragraph 2.1 shall not apply to liability for Injury or Damage or
loss of or physical damage to
or
destruction of
tangible property or loss of use of such property damaged or
destroyed, where such seepage, pollution or contamination
is caused
by a sudden, unintended and unexpected happening during the period of
this insurance;
2.2
The cost of removing, nullifying or deeming-up seeping, polluting or
contaminating substances unless the seepage,
pollution or
contamination is caused by a sudden unintended and unexpected
happening during the period of this insurance, and including
such
costs incurred in order to avoid or minimise Injury or Damage.”
[36]
The word, damage, is defined as loss of or damage to property,
including loss of use of property
under the General Operative Clause.
‘Still under General Operative Clause of Part 2 of the
contract, ‘pollution’
means ‘the emission,
discharge, dispersal, disposal, seepage, release or escape of any
liquid, solid, gaseous or thermal
irritant, contaminant or pollutant
into or upon land, the atmosphere or any water-course or body of
water. The second part of the
definition of pollution is not relevant
for purposes of this judgment. As such, it is omitted.
[37]
To go back to the part of the contract headed: ‘General
Conditions Applicable to all Sections
of the Policy’, Clause 2
provides that:
“
The
Insured shall give written notice to the Insurer as soon as
reasonably practicable of any occurrence that may give rise to a
claim under this Policy and shall give all such additional
information as the Insurers may require. Every claim, writ, summons
of process and all documents relating thereto shall be forwarded to
the Insurers immediately they are received.”
[38]
Clause 3 under the same Section prescribes that:
“
No
admission, offer, promise or payment shall be made or given by or on
behalf of the Insured without the written consent of the
Insurer who
shall be entitled to take over and conduct in the name of the Insured
the defence or settlement of any claim or to
prosecute in the name of
the Insured for their own benefit any claim for indemnity or damages
or otherwise and shall have full
discretion in the conduct of Any
proceedings and in the settlement of any claim and the Insured shall
give all such information
and assistance as the Insurers may
reasonably require.”
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[39]
There is general understanding between the parties that for the one
or other party to be held
liable or absolved, the universal rules of
construal of the pertinent provisions of the contract and legislation
find application.
Recognising that background and context against
which a document was concluded to interpret it is not akin to making
a contract
for the parties, it is agreed that The above requires a
court to pay attention to the language of the
document,
read it in context and have regard to the purpose of the relevant
provisions to establish the intention of the parties
.
The following passage of the SCA from the famous paragraph from
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
,
fortifies the statement:
“
The
present state of the law can be expressed as follows:
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the
document, consideration must be given to the language used in the
light of the ordinary rules of grammar
and syntax; the context in
which the provision appears; the apparent purpose to which it is
directed and the material known to
those responsible for its
production
. Where more than one
meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of
all factors. The process is objective,
not subjective. A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines the
apparent purpose of the
document.
Judges must be alert
to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute what they regard
as reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the words actually used.
To do so in regard to a statue or statutory instrument is to cross
the divide between interpretation
and legislation; in a contractual
context it is to make a contract for the parties other than the one
they in fact made
. The
“inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself”, read in context and having regard to
the purpose of
the provision and the background to the preparation and production of
the document.
”
[40]
Section 30(4) of NEMA prescribes that:
“
(4)
The responsible person or, where the
incident occurred in the course of that person’s employment,
his or her employer, must,
as soon as reasonably practicable after
knowledge of the incident—
(a)
take all reasonable measures to contain and minimise the effects of
the incident, including its effects
on
the
environment
and
any
risks
posed
by
the
incident
to
the
health,
safety
and
property
of persons;
(b)
undertake clean-up procedures;
(c)
remedy the effects of the incident;
(d)
assess the immediate and long-term effects of the incident on the
environment and public health.”
[41]
Section 30(8) provides that where the responsible person fails or
inadequately complies with
a directive under Subsection (6), or in
the event of uncertainty on who the responsible person is or where
there exists an immediate
risk of serious danger to the public or
potentially serious detriment to the environment, a relevant
authority may take the measures
it considers necessary to:
“
(i)
contain and minimise the effects of
the incident;
(ii)
undertake clean-up procedures;
and
(iii)
remedy the effects of the incident.”
[42]
Subsection 9 makes provision that the relevant authority may claim
re-imbursement of all reasonable
costs incurred by it in terms of
subsection (8) from every responsible person jointly and severally.
[43]
If ambivalence persists following application of the primary general
rules, other principles
of interpretation must be invoked. I am
mindful that while the aforesaid is common cause, the parties are
sharply divided on the
existence of a need to appeal to further
interpretive guidelines to resolve the alleged obscurity. To the
extent that these rules
may become necessary as this judgment
unfolds, I continue to describe them below:
43.1 The parties’
subsequent conduct after the conclusion of the contract;
43.2 Where an
ambiguity arises on the face of the policy, a contract of insurance
should be construed in favour of the insured
rather than the insurer;
43.3 If ambiguity
persists after the application of all the interpretive guidelines,
resort may be had to the
contra proferentem rule
, according to
which a contract must be construed against the contracting party by
whom it was formulated.
ANALYSIS
[44]
Santam denied that the occurrence is covered by the contract.
Consequently, it repudiated the
claim lodged by Transnet
for
indemnification of the amounts expended for the rehabilitation of the
polluted area occasioned by the seepage of the contaminant
or for any
amounts that may become payable in future. The grounds of its refusal
to indemnify is that:
44.1
No liability arises under the contract for a purely statutory
obligation imposed in terms of NEMA for pollution rehabilitation
costs;
44.2
In terms of the General Operative Clause of the contract read
together with Section B, Indemnity Clause, it assumed the
obligation
to indemnify Transnet against liability to pay compensation arising
from damage to property. The occurrence against
which Transnet seeks
indemnity is not compensation emanating from damage to property;
44.3 In terms of
General Exclusion
2
of the contract of insurance, there is no
indemnity under the contract of insurance for liability for damage to
property directly
or indirectly caused by pollution or contamination
unless such pollution or contamination is caused by a sudden,
unintended and
unexpected happening. The occurrence involved here for
which Transnet claims indemnity is not for liability for damage to
property
occasioned as aforesaid;
44.4 General
Condition 2 of the contract makes it a condition precedent to its
liability to indemnify that Transnet gives
written notice to it “
as
soon as reasonably practicable
" of any occurrence that may
give rise to a claim under the contract. To the extent that Transnet
only notified it of the occurrence
on 7 April 2011, it contends that
Transnet failed to give notice as soon as it was reasonably
practicable and as such, has failed
to comply with the terms of the
contract;
44.5 Lastly,
General Condition 3 of the contract makes it clear that its liability
to indemnify Transnet is contingent upon
the latter not making any
admission, offer, promise or payment without its written consent.
Insofar as it did not give any written
approval to Transnet to make
the payments for which it now seeks indemnity, Transnet has violated
one of the terms of the contract.
[45]
Prior to probing anyone of the grounds on which Santam believes the
claim should be dismissed,
I need to indicate that any of them will
be dispositive of this whole action. With that preface behind, I
proceed to consider each
of them.
NO
LIABILITY ARISES UNDER THE CONTRACT FOR
A PURELY STATUTORY OBLIGATION IMPOSED IN TERMS OF NEMA FOR POLLUSION
REHABILITATION COSTS
[46]
Transnet is firm that in terms of the General Operative Clause of the
contract it is envisaged
that where Transnet is under obligation to
act as contemplated in Section 30(4) of NEMA, Santam is obliged
indemnify it against
its liability to pay compensation. Transnet
vigorously argued that its approach is fortified by the decision of
this Court in
Verulam
Fuel Distributers CC V Truck and General Insurance Company Ltd &
another
[2]
.
[47]
Transnet readily conceded that it relies on the case mindful that the
wording of the indemnity
clause in the case is different from the
current. The difference lies in the indemnity being against all sums
of money paid in
undertaking the clean-up operations in the case of
Verulam Fuel Distributers CC
supra
whereas
in casu
the
relevant clause provides that the insurers will indemnify the insured
against their liability to pay compensation (including
claimants’
costs, fees and expenses) …
[48]
Insofar as I could apprehend its argument, Transnet attributes no or
little significance to the
difference between the provisions of the
clauses because fundamentally the primary principles are akin. The
emphasis for Transnet
is on how legal liability for Santam arises.
For Transnet it is irrelevant that it does so as a matter of a
statutory obligation
or a third party claiming compensation against
it. In justification of its argument, Transnet refers to the
pronouncement of this
Court in Verulam Fuel Distributors
supra
at
paragraph 13.
[49]
At paragraph 13, this Court found that on a proper interpretation of
the indemnity clause, the
insurer’s obligation to indemnify the
insured arises where an accident has been caused by an insured
vehicle as a result
of which the insured incurs expenses for which it
is legally liable to pay, the only proviso being that there ought to
exist a
direct causal link between the expenses incurred and the
damage to property of the third party. The Court rejected the notion
that
it is a requirement that the owner of the property must first
seek to hold the insured liable for the damage. It concluded that
liability can arise from a statute, as occurred in this case and in
Verulam.
[50]
I agree with Santam that I cannot disregard the difference in the
wording of the two clauses
in Verulam Fuel Distributers and the case
in casu
. In Verulam Fuel Distributers, this Court held as it
did because it did not matter that the legal indemnity arose as a
result of
a statutory obligation or a third party claiming
compensation from the insured. The reason is apparent – the
insured was
covered against all sums … whereas
in casu
the indemnity of the insured is against its liability to pay
compensation … Compensation in the sense employed
in casu
has a more limited application in that it envisages a party
claiming compensation against Transnet and not seeking reimbursement
as a matter of statutory obligation as Transnet would have this court
believe
.
[
51]
In Verulam Fuel Distributers
supra,
the
Court found the overseas case of M/S
Aswan
Engineering
Establishment
Co
Ltd
v
Iron
Trades
Mutual
Insurance
Co
Ltd
[3]
where
the Court had interpret a provision that was substantially similar as
the one it was contending with. The clause read: ".
. .The
company subject to the terms, exclusions and conditions herein
contained will indemnify the insured . . . against all sums
which the
insured shall become liable at law to pay as damages . . . in respect
of or in consequence of . . . accidental loss of
or damage to
property from whatsoever cause arising during the said period of
insurance . . ."
[52]
The Court in M/S Aswan Engineering Establishment Co. Ltd
supra
stated that a policy of this kind needs to be construed having
regard to the ordinary use of language. If the words used have an
ordinary and natural meaning that is reasonably clear that is the
meaning which should be adopted and the court should not entertain
an
obscure or contrived argument to give these words some different
meaning. The Court went on to say that this principle is reinforced
where it is the insurance company that is seeking to reject the
ordinary meaning and where the document is, as here, a standard
form
document produced by the insurance company itself.
[53]
The court then stated that 'Liable at law' on its ordinary meaning
simply means legal liability.
This is a common-place, though to a
lawyer tautologous phrase, and is used in the title of the policy
itself, 'third party (legal
and contractual liability) insurance'.
The court rejected the argument of the defendants that it was
equivalent to liability in
tort
. The Court said that but that
was not what the wording says because it could be noted that when the
defendants wish to refer to
such liability they expressly do so a few
words later as part of the definition of the second aspect of the
basic cover: liability
in
tort
or under statute."
[54]
Importantly The court then concluded by stating that the cases
demonstrate how an insurance company
can word its policies if it
wishes to exclude contractual liabilities, as indeed is common-place
in public liability policies.
[55]
Santam has referred this Court to several foreign jurisdiction
dealing with the concept of compensation
as used in the context of
the
General
Operative Clause. the relevant indemnity clause in a matter that came
before Court in
Hamcor
(Pty) Limited and Another v Marsh (Pty) Limited and Another
[4]
read:
“
The
Insurers will indemnify the Insured against their liability to pay
compensation for and/or arising out of Injury and/or Damage
(including claimants’ costs, fees and expenses), occurring
within the territorial limits…
”
[56]
Mindful that in the Hamcor case the plaintiff sought to claim
compensation for clean-up costs
incurred by it for damage caused to a
property that it owned while there was a clause that specifically
prohibited such, the Court
dismissed the claim and said:
“
The
[Insured’s]
proposed
construction fails to have due regard to the language of the
Operative Clause. The ‘insured’ are to be indemnified
‘against their liability to pay compensation’. The
[Insured’s]
argument
accepts that ‘liability’ means being under a legal
obligation of some form or another. That obligation is of
a
particular kind. It is not a liability to comply with court orders
or
other statutory requirements regarding the land
;
it is a liability to ‘pay compensation’. Those words,
necessarily, contemplate the recompensing of a third party in
respect
of the insured’s liability to that third party or otherwise by
legal compulsion. The
[Insureds]
sought
to overcome this difficulty by asserting that, where remediation work
was done, there was a liability to pay or recompense
the contractors
who performed the work. This, it was said, was a ‘liability to
pay compensation’. Such a construction
gives an unnecessarily
contrived, not to say improbable, meaning to the word ‘compensation’.
The words ‘liability
to pay compensation’ have their
ordinary, everyday meaning.
”
[57]
In the circumstances, I find the Hamcor decision to be almost on ‘all
fours’ with
the casein
casu
.
Accordingly, there is
substance in the
interpretive argument raised by Santam such that the two clauses
cannot be characterized analogously. I am entitled
to dismiss the
claim on this basis alone but I choose to proceed to consider the
other grounds in case this matter is appealed
in which case the court
of appeal might find itself impoverished because of my lack of
consideration of the other grounds.
[58]
Santam also contended that Transnet has failed to prove on a balance
of probabilities the allegation
made in its particulars of claim that
had it not expended the funds towards the rehabilitation of the
contaminated area, the relevant
authority would have undertaken the
cleaning-up operations itself and sought to be reimbursed in terms of
Section 30(8) and (9)
of NEMA respectively. This is aside from
Transnet having promised to call a witness and the case being partly
postponed to allow
it to do so. I agree with this submission. The
allegation pertaining to the provisions of Section 30(8) and (9) of
NEMA without
substantiation is bare.
IN
TERMS OF THE GENERAL OPERATIVE CLAUSE OF THE CONTRACT READ TOGETHER
WITH SECTION
B,
THE OCCURRANCE AGAINST WHICH TRANSNET
SEEKS INDEMNITY IS NOT COMPENSATION EMANATING FROM DAMAGE TO PROPERTY
[59]
The contention by Santam that this was an indemnity type insurance
intended to compensate Transnet
only in situations where damage has
been caused to a third party’s property and the third party has
claimed for such loss
from Transnet finds favour with this Court. I
have partly dealt with this contention by Santam above. Transnet has
argued that
this court in Verulam Fuel Distributers
supra
rejected this assertion when it said:
“
[8]
I do not agree with the construction
contended for. The first defendant attributes a much narrower meaning
to subsection B than
is permitted by language. It is well settled
that the intention of the parties is, in the first instance, to be
gathered from the
language used in the policy which, if clear, must
be given effect to. This involves giving the words their plain,
ordinary and
popular meaning unless the context indicates otherwise.”
[60]
On the facts of Verulam, one cannot falter the decision of the Court.
It must be borne in mind
that the insured in that case was covered
against indemnity for all sums, which is radically different from
this case. So, on the
facts in this case, it is important to note
that Santam has designed the indemnity clause in a manner that
attracts a contracted
interpretation. Accordingly, it should be of
consequence to distinguish whether the legal indemnity arises as a
matter of statutory
obligation or because of a party claiming
compensation against the insured, Transnet in this instance.
[61]
Again, I need to reiterate that given the facts in Verulam the
following paragraph ought to be
understood in context:
“
[12]
As to the contention that the
heading of subsection B is an indication that only the owners of the
affected land may seek to hold
the plaintiff liable I would say the
following. There is no reason to restrict the expression "third
party" to the owner
of the land that was damaged by the
spillage. To do so would be inconsistent with the wide and expansive
language employed in the
subsection. In Digby v General Accident Fire
and Life Assurance Corporation Ltd
[1942] 2 All ER 319
it was held
that the phrase "third party liability" did not have a
rigid and definite meaning, so as to require in all
instances, three
parties. The phrase is used to indicate an indemnity against some
liability, in contradistinction to an indemnity
against loss or
damage to the insured's own property. It means only that the insurer
will indemnify the insured against proper
liability incurred
elsewhere.”
IN TERMS OF
EXCLUSION
2
OF THE CONTRACT OF INSURANCE, WAS THE POLLUTION OR
CONTEMINATION CAUSED BY A SUDDEN, UNINTENDED AND UNEXPECTED HAPPENING
[62]
The argument by Santam in this regard is firstly, that the occurrence
was not sudden as the escape
of the fuel from the incision was
deliberately controlled by the thieves causing the discharge to
happen over an extended period.
This is common cause between the
parties. Secondly, it was intended because the thieves’
objective was to continue stealing
the fuel for as long as they
remained undetected. Lastly, it was expected as the thieves
anticipated to receive the fuel from the
cut pipeline.
[63]
The definition of the word, ‘sudden’ has occupied the
minds of different Courts in
this country and many jurisdictions
abroad. Having considered how the word has been interpreted by both
overseas and court in this
country, the Court in
African
Products (Pty) Ltd v AIG South Africa Ltd
[5]
at paragraph 19 settled on
the meaning assigned to it by the Court
a
quo
that
in the context used in the contract should be understood in its
temporal sense, meaning "abrupt" or "occurring
quickly" or "taking place all at once". In this
contract too, it is my opinion, that ‘sudden’ is meant
to
deliver the same meaning.
[64]
The assertion by Transnet that sudden ought to be understood to mean
that the seepage did not
happen as a result of wear and tear such as
corrosion of the pipeline stands to be rejected. The event covered by
the policy is
the seepage that caused pollution not the puncturing.
The escape of the fuel was gradual and so was the seepage. This had
to be
the case as the thieves supervised the escape of the fuel from
the pipeline. Accordingly, it was not sudden as the parties had
intended in the contract.
[65]
I find the example given by the Court at paragraph 20 of the African
Products case
supra
similar to this situation. For that
reason, it could be useful to reproduce it below
:
“…
Were
a motor which drives a
conveyor
belt
in
the
production
line
in
the
plant
to
stop
running
suddenly
and
without
warning (unexpectedly) and it is
subsequently discovered that a new screw inside the motor had
snapped, causing other parts to be
dislodged, the insurer would be
liable to indemnify the insured for lost production while repairs to
the motor were being effected.
The physical damage that would have
occurred as a result of the snapping of the screw would have been
both unforeseen and sudden.
Were it to be found, however, that a
screw
inside
the
motor
had
broken
as
a
result
of
wearing
out
over
a
period,
then
the
physical
damage, though unforeseen, would not
have been "sudden". The wearing out would have happened
over time but would only
have manifested itself when the screw
eventually broke. In this scenario the insurer would not be liable to
indemnify the insured
for loss of production. The fact that the
physical damage (wearing out) was undiscovered until the screw broke
does not make the
breaking sudden.”
[66]
It follows that if the escape of the fuel was controlled by the
thieves, they must have intended
to continue with their illicit
enterprise for as long as they remained uncovered. The expectation
was that they would carry on
to receive fuel from the incision
created by them on the pipeline. The fact that Pilime stated in Court
that the piercing of the
pipeline was sudden cannot turn it into one,
it being immaterial that no witness on behalf of Santam contested his
testimony.
GENERAL CONDITION 2
OF THE CONTRACT MAKES IT A CONDITION PRECEDENT FOR TRANSNET TO GIVE
WRITTEN NOTICE TO SANTAM “AS SOON
AS REASONABLY PRACTICABLE "
OF ANY OCCURRENCE THAT MAY GIVE RISE TO A CLAIM UNDER THE CONTRACT
AND IN TERMS OF GENERAL CONDITION
3 TRANSNET DID NOT OBTAIN THE
WRITTEN CONSENT OF SANTAM BEFORE EXPENDING FUNDS FOR THE
REHABILITATION
[67]
Santam contended in this regard that the period that elapsed between
the occurrence and the date
on which Transnet supplied it with a
written notification reporting the incidence was not given ‘as
soon as was reasonably
practicable’ as required by the
provisions of the contract. The occurrence took place on 28 January
2011 but Transnet only
notified Santam in writing on 7 April 2011,
approximately two months after the incidence. To show that it had
complied with the
above condition, Transnet led the evidence of
Mahesh.
[68]
Mahesh stated that the form that she had to complete when notifying
Santam of the incidence was
not as categorical as it could have been
because it was open to various interpretations. It would seem that
the meaning that Santam
attaches to the phrase is that Transnet was
supposed to have reported the incidence almost immediately following
the discovery.
On the other hand, she understood ‘as soon as
reasonably practicable’ to require Transnet to first form some
reasonable
estimate of the costs involved in the rehabilitation of
the area.
[69]
The meaning that she attached to the phrase was not corrected by
anyone from Santam, if anything,
it was encouraged and left to endure
until culminated by the letter of repudiation on 20 March 2014. for
Mahesh reporting almost
immediately would have been a difficult
exercise because the costs escalated over a period as one continued
to investigate the
damage. Santam, as the party that designed the
form and wishing to rely on the exclusion, ought to have appreciated
that this was
a possible meaning that an insured party such as
Transnet could assign to ‘as soon as practicable’.
[70]
Mahesh’s further evidence was that upon delivery of the claim
form to Santam on 7 April
2011, it proceeded to appoint a loss
adjustor. Strangely, Santam never complained of late submission of
the claim when Transnet
notified it. She had estimated the costs at
R4 Million
while the loss adjuster on 20 August 2011, four
months later, projected it at
R4.5 Million
, a fact that
validates the ever-increasing nature of the costs over time and the
difficulty of furnishing precise figures early
in the process.
[71]
In fact Mahesh’s evidence that the loss adjustor specifically
told her that he would only
compile his report upon receiving all the
costs was not challenged. Additionally, other than cross examining
Mahesh on her point
that insofar as she was concerned, Transnet had
notified Santam of the claim ‘as soon as reasonably
practicable’, her
evidence is essentially uncontested and must
stand. Furthermore, and in any event, Santam has failed to
demonstrate that the claim
stood to be excluded based on this.
[72]
According to the contract, it is not every damage that will lead to a
claim being brought against
the insurer (Santam). In those
circumstances therefore it is understandable why an insured would
first investigate to establish
whether or not this incidence would
lead to a claim. It took Transnet a period as little as two months to
give written notification
of the claim in circumstances where Santam
had chosen to use a nebulous phrase such as, ‘as soon as
reasonably practicable’.
Given that background it can hardly be
said that the period was not as soon as reasonably practicable and in
any event, the
contra preferandum
rule finds application
against Santam.
[73]
Mindful that other than advising the various relevant Transnet
personnel that it was considering
or investigating the possibility of
making interim payments, at no stage did Santam unequivocally
undertake that it would make
payment. This much was conceded by
Mahesh during her testimony. Santam’s behavior though raises an
important question –
why was it necessary, if at all, to
repudiate the claim three years later when it genuinely believed that
Transnet had failed to
have notified it of the claim ‘as soon
as reasonably practicable’?
[74]
Of course, Santam has always been at liberty to raise the issue
concerning prompt notification
especially if the reservation of
rights contained in the letter of repudiation is anything to judge
this but its conduct following
receipt thereof suggests that it had
accepted that the notice was in order. It is inexorable to conclude
as I did when the following
is considered:
74.1 On being
served with the notice, it acknowledged receipt and appointed a loss
adjustor who throughout the entire three
years communicated with
Mahesh and other relevant personnel from Transnet about the claim;
74.2 During the
three-year period, a subtle message that interim payment would be
made lingered thus keeping Transnet on a
string; and
74.3 Santam
repudiated the claim on an interpretive point as against lack of
punctuality of the notification.
[75]
Taking all the above into consideration, post the notification on 7
April 2011, I am persuaded
that the parties’ conduct is
representative of a behavior consistent with a person believing that
the notification was furnished
‘as soon as reasonably
practicable.
[76]
Transnet has, in the alternative, argued that the conduct of Santam
was consistent with a party
that has waived its right to raise the
exclusion pertaining to punctuality. Perhaps it could be instructive
at this juncture to
refer to the case of
Road
Accident Fund v Mothupi
[6]
where the Court at paragraph
15 stated that waiver is first and foremost a matter of intention.
Whether it is the waiver of a right
or a remedy, a privilege or
power, an interest or benefit, and whether in unilateral or bilateral
form, the starting point invariably
is the will of the party said to
have waived it.
[77]
At paragraph 16, the Court continued to state that the test to
determine intention to waive has
been said to be objective That
means, first, that intention to waive, like intention generally, is
decided by its outward manifestations,
secondly, that mental
reservations, not communicated, are of no legal consequence and
thirdly, that the outward manifestations
of intention are resolved
from the perspective of the other party concerned, that is to say,
from the perspective of the reasonable
person standing in the shoes
of the latter.
[78]
The outward manifestations can consist of words; of some other form
of conduct from which the
intention to waive is inferred; or even of
inaction or silence where a duty to act or speak exists. See,
paragraph 18 of the Mothupi
case
supra. A
t paragraph 19, the
Court says that since no one is presumed to waive his rights,
firstly, the
onus
is on the party alleging it and secondly,
clear proof is required of an intention to do so. The conduct from
which waiver is inferred,
so it has frequently been stated, must be
unequivocal, that is to say, consistent with no other hypothesis.
[79]
Like in the Mothupi case, Santam did not in any express terms notify
Transnet in advance that
it would be invoking the exclusions
concerning lack of prompt notification of the claim and failure to
obtain prior approval to
expend funds towards the rehabilitation of
the area. Again, as in the case of the Mothupi case, the controversy
becomes whether
or not Santam’s failure to have done so
amounted to a conduct reminiscent of a party that would not place
reliance on those
exclusions to repudiate Transnet’s claim.
Transnet contends that whichever way one assesses the behavior of
Santam, in every
respect its conduct was in harmony with those of a
party which had waived its right to raise the exclusions.
[80]
In other words, any reasonable man in the shoes of Transnet would
have read the conduct of Santam
not to have been consistent with any
other proposition but that it has waived its right. At paragraph 74.1
to 74.3, in a different
context, I have described the conduct that
inescapably lead to this conclusion. The significance of the conduct
warrants reiteration:
80.1
Conscious of the late delivery of the written
notice of the claim, Santam went ahead to accept it, acknowledged
receipt and appointed
a loss adjustor who throughout the entire three
years exchanged a substantial amount of correspondence with Mahesh
and other relevant
personnel from Transnet about the claim;
80.2 During the
three-year period, a subtle message that interim payment would be
made lingered thus keeping Transnet on a
string; and
80.3 Santam
repudiated the claim on an interpretive point as against - that the
claim was not lodged ‘as soon as reasonably
practicable’.
[81]
Is there a different hypothesis that can be assigned to this conduct
other than that Santam had
waived its right? The answer, in my
opinion must be in the negative. At the risk of repeating oneself,
why was it important to
wait for approximately three years to
repudiate when this could have been done right at the onset? Why was
it necessary to string
along Transnet for a period of three years if
Santam was not seriously considering to compensate Transnet for the
funds expended
towards the rehabilitation of the area?
[82]
Santam had right at the time of submission of the claim been aware
that Transnet did not comply
with General Exclusion 3 – no
prior approval was obtained from it for the payment of the
rehabilitation expenses. One would
have expected Santam to
immediately object to the claim because lack of compliance was so
conspicuous and transparent. Its failure
to have done so, in my
opinion, is representative of an unequivocal conduct distinctive of a
party waiving its right. Even if I
am wrong in my approach to this
issue, Santam has not contested the evidence of Mahesh on the two
exclusions.
FINDINGS
[83]
The following are the findings flowing from the judgment:
83.1 Legal
liability to indemnify can arise from an obligation imposed on an
insured by a statute but the wording of the indemnity
clause negates
this possibility in this case;
83.2 Similarly, the
compensation sought by Transnet emanates from damage caused to
another’s property but on the facts
of this case absent a claim
from the third party, Transnet cannot succeed;
83.3 The
compensation sought by Transnet is not for damage caused suddenly,
unexpectedly and unintentionally;
83.4 Insofar as
general exclusions 2 and 3 are concerned, it is inevitable to
conclude that Santam, has by its conduct, waived
its right to rely on
General Exclusions 2 and 3 of the contract.
CONCLUSION
[84]
In the result and recalling that I have stated that anyone of the
points raised by Santam would
be dispositive of this matter, the
action fails and I make the following order:
The claim is dismissed
with costs including those consequent upon the employment of two
counsel, where applicable.
B
A MASHILE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTEMG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email. The date
and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 09 November 2022 at 10:00.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv
G D Harpur SC
Instructed
by:
Mkhabela Huntley Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the Defendant:
Adv B
Berridge SC
Instructed
by:
Clyde & Co
Date
of Judgment:
09 November 2022
[1]
2012
(4) SA 593
SCA at 603F – 604D
[2]
(2002)
JOL 13042
(W)
[3]
1989
(1)
Lloyds
Rep.
289
[4]
[2013]
QCA 262
[5]
(2009)
4 All SA 99 (SCA)
[6]
2000
(4) SA 38
(SCA)
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