Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 989South Africa
C.M.M v Discovery Life (2023-013519) [2024] ZAGPPHC 989 (26 September 2024)
Headnotes
the special plea of no locus standi.”
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## C.M.M v Discovery Life (2023-013519) [2024] ZAGPPHC 989 (26 September 2024)
C.M.M v Discovery Life (2023-013519) [2024] ZAGPPHC 989 (26 September 2024)
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sino date 26 September 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 2023-013519
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date
26 September 2024
Signature
In
the matter between:
C[...]
M[...]
M[...]
Applicant
and
DISCOVERY
LIFE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
WILLIAMS,
AJ
[1]
The applicant acts in her capacity as mother and guardian of her
daughter, B[...]
M[...] (born 26 January 2009). She
claims benefits under a Group Life Policy issued by the respondent.
In issue
is the proof that one Mr I M M[...] (“the
employee”) is B[...]’s father. He passed
away
on 7 May 2016.
[2]
The Global Education Protector portion of the Group Life Policy
concluded between the respondent
and the employer, Trollip Mining
Services 2000 (Pty) Ltd (“the employer”), provides
indemnity cover for the education
of an employee’s children.
[3]
3.1. The respondent disputes, firstly, the
applicant’s
locus standi
.
3.2.
It also argues that the respondent’s decision to reject the
claim is
not reviewable, being rooted in contract.
3.3.
The respondent also contends that the applicant has not met the
preconditions
for liability under the policy. An Unabridged
Birth Certificate, which states paternity
and
proof that the
employee actually made contributions to B[...]’s education, are
required.
3.4.
It is also contended that entitlement to benefits has prescribed.
LOCUS
STANDI:
[4]
For applicant to have
locus standi
there must be privity of
contract between the applicant and the respondent (or at least
between the employee and the respondent).
Otherwise, the
applicant must show that she, B[...] or the deceased became parties
to the contract, on the basis of the policy
constituting
stipulatio
alteri
.
[5]
The policy relied upon was concluded between the respondent and the
employer. All
benefits due under the policy are to be paid to
the employer, in accordance with the employer’s instructions.
The employer
paid the premiums.
[6]
LAWSA (Insurance Part 2 : (Volume 12(2), Second Edition)
at 102
explains that a Group Insurance Scheme rests on an agreement between
the employer and the members of the scheme (the employees).
It
is “
the scheme leader then contracts in his or her own name
with the insurer (in casu, the respondent)”
(my
parenthesis). The learned authors explain that there is no
contract between the members (employees) of the scheme and
the
insurer (the respondent herein) “...
and consequently
members do not acquire any direct or any other right against the
insurer”
.
[7]
A number of authorities quoted by the respondent’s
counsel
establish that employees are always non-suited in such cases on the
basis of not having the necessary
locus standi
:
7.1
Crossman v Capital Alliance Group Risk
[2022] ZAGPJHC
257 at paras 34 and 35:
“
[34]
In the circumstances, there is simply no basis for the
conclusion that the deceased, as a member, was a contractual
party to
the Policy. Further, the Policy provisions are not indicative of an
intention by the contracting parties that the members
and/or
beneficiaries should become parties to the contract. To the contrary,
they indicate quite clearly that the members and/or
beneficiaries are
not intended to become parties to the Policy.
[35]
In the circumstances, having regard to the express provisions of the
Policy, I am of the view that the Policy
does not constitute a
stipulatio alteri
in any form and no contractual privity was
created at any time between Capital Alliance and Crossman. It
follows, in my view that
Crossman has, as a result failed to
establish her locus standi to institute these proceedings
.”
7.2
Sage Life Ltd v Van der Merwe
2001 2 SA 166
(W) at 169:
“
The
first principle is that it must be clear from the terms of the
contract between the original parties that it is a contract
meant
for the benefit of a third in the sense that a third party is meant
to step in, whether as an additional party or in lieu
of one of the
others. The clauses in the contract which indicate the contrary have
already been referred to. The fact that there
are express provisions
requiring the scheme to make claims, requiring the
excipient/defendant to pay the claims to the scheme and
the express
stipulation that the excipient/defendant may not claim premiums from
the plaintiff/respondent, all indicate an intention
that members of
the scheme or employees should not become parties to the contract.
In
the circumstances, having regard to the express provisions of the
contract between the scheme and between the excipient, Sage
Life Ltd,
I am of the view that the contract does not constitute a
stipulatio alteri
in any form and that there is no contractual
nexus apparent from the documents which the plaintiff/respondent has
placed before
this Court. Even if that were the case, the excipient
has argued also that a
stipulatio alteri
has not been pleaded
and that the basic requirements for a
stipulatio alteri
have
not been pleaded.”
7.3
Capital Alliance Life Ltd v Simonsen
[2005] JOL 13913
(N):
The respondent’s
counsel argues:
“
In
Capital
Alliance Life Ltd v Simonsen
[2005] JOL 13913
(N)
, the
plaintiff was a member of a “provident fund” (essentially
a Group Life scheme) offered by his employer. The plaintiff
was
disabled and left his employer's service. As a result, he claimed
disability benefits directly from the insurance company which
underwrote his employer's provident fund. The insurance company
issued a certificate acknowledging the claim on which it was stated
that the claim be paid out, after tax deductions, by the employer.
Nevertheless, the insurance company paid the disability
grant for
several months and then stopped. When the plaintiff took action the
insurance company, as defendant in the court a quo,
delivered a
special plea that the plaintiff lacked locus standi. The Court a quo
dismissed the special plea. On appeal, Levinsohn
found that there was
no privity of contract between the plaintiff and the insurer and
upheld the special plea of no locus standi.”
7.4
Connolly v The Southern Life Association Ltd and Another
2000 JDR 0629 (SE):
“
The
Court referred to the unreported decision in
Beling v The
Southern Life Association Limited (Case No. CA 151/97)
and
paraphrased the ratio in that judgment as follows:
“
The
court was there concerned with a contract between an insurance
company (incidentally, the first defendant in the present matter)
and
a provident fund the terms of which were, to all intents and
purposes, the same as the contract in the present case. It was
held
that the contract did not found any cause of action against the
insurance company by the plaintiff in that case, who was a
member of
the provident fund and who had sought relief similar to that sought
by the plaintiff in the present proceedings against
the first
defendant. The essential ratio of the decision was that the plaintiff
was not a party to the contract in question.”
[8]
I have searched for authority (in respect of Group Life
Insurance
Schemes) which might have assisted the applicant.
8.1
Sage
Life Ltd v Van der Merwe
[1]
specifically
dealt with this issue. It points out – in coming to the
conclusion that the member of a Group Life Insurance
Scheme party may
not himself or herself claim benefits directly from the insurer –
that for such third party (here the employee)
to have
locus
standi
,
there must have been an acceptance of benefits – on the basis
that such third party becomes a contracting party and that
one of the
other parties must “
fall
out of
the picture”
.
That cannot be said to have happened in the instant matter. The
doctrine of
stipulatio
alteri
cannot be deployed here to allow applicant to escape the binding
authority referred to above.
[9]
Clause 1 and 2 of the Group Life Benefit Scheme makes
it clear that
the employee (B[...]’s alleged father) became a member of the
Trollip Mining Services Scheme, not a party.
Any remedies
sought must be sought against the Scheme, through the auspices of the
erstwhile employer.
[10]
It follows that the application must fail because the applicant does
not have
the
locus standi
.
TERMS:
[11]
The policy requires that the particular child must be the biological
or legally
adopted child of the employee. The stated aim of the
Global Education Protector benefit is to ensure that the education of
a member’s child is not affected by the employee’s death.
[12]
The obvious proof would be in an official Birth Certificate which
indicates
the paternity. The father’s particulars, which are to
be stated on the Birth Certificate which the applicant obtained from
the Department of Home Affairs (G[...]), is blank. The
applicant explains the difficulties that she has encountered to
obtain
a Birth Certificate, which also includes B[...]’s
father’s particulars. This is apparently difficult to
remedy
when the alleged father is pre-deceased.
[13]
Clause 4.19 of the “Discovery Life Group Risk Plan Guide”
casts
the burden of proving eligibility for the Global Education
Protector on the policyholder. Here the employer is the
policyholder,
not the plaintiff. Much turns on this. The
employer has clearly adopted the attitude that it is reliant on the
deceased
member’s family securing and submitting proof that the
employee was B[...]’s biological or adoptive parent.
[14]
The respondent specifically contracted for the right to determine
what “
the information required as proof of eligibility
”
should consist of. It stipulated that “
if the claim is
accepted, the benefit payment will only take place when all the
requested information has been received
”. It is not
clear whether the claim was “
accepted
” (seemingly
not), subject to further information. The respondent has
demanded that “
at least an Unabridged Birth Certificate for
the child and proof of payment by the member for the child’s
school fees for
the 12 months before the member’s death
will be required
”.
HISTORY:
[15]
The employee (B[...]’s alleged father) passed away on 7 May
2016.
This application was launched in February 2023, almost 7
years later. The correspondence attached to the application
reveals
that already in 2016, shortly after the demise of the
employee, there were attempts to lodge a claim through the auspices
of the
employer’s broker. That apparently floundered,
because of an inability on the part of the employer and/or the
applicant
to obtain a Full Birth Certificate from the Department of
Home Affairs, wherein the particulars of B[...]’s father are
also
recorded.
[16]
Correspondence exchanged during 2018 reveals that there was a change
of broker.
The new brokers also took the matter up and was met
with the refrain that there is still no proof of paternity,
specifically that
an Unabridged Birth Certificate reflecting who
B[...]’s father was, had not been submitted.
[17]
Neither the broker/s, nor the employer, nor the applicant have been
able to
satisfy the respondent as to who B[...]’s biological or
adoptive father is. The erstwhile employer should have pursued
this and made efforts to assist the applicant. The
employer is not before Court.
[18]
On 26 August 2022 (some 5½ years after the employee’s
death)
the respondent formally declined to satisfy the claim for
benefits under the Global Education Protector portion of the policy.
The respondent could not have been expected to hold the file open
forever.
[19]
This application was issued by the Registrar on 14 February 2023.
I accept
it was served within 6 months of the formal rejection by the
respondent. Because the matter dragged, it was launched almost
7 years after the employee’s death.
RELIEF:
[20]
20.1.
Prayer 1 of the Notice of Motion seeks the review and setting aside
of the decision of the respondent “
... to refuse to pay the
educational plan under Policy Number 8[...]”
.
20.2.
Prayer 2 seeks an order that the respondent be directed to pay the
Educational Plan Policy in accordance with the policy
within 30 days
of the Court’s Order.
20.3.
In the founding affidavit the case for review is formulated on the
basis that the requirement that a claimant must submit
an Unabridged
Birth Certificate (which includes detail of the father), is
irrational, arbitrary and exclusionary (and prejudicial
to deserving
children).
[21]
The respondent’s rejection of the claim (allegedly) because of
non-availability
of an Unabridged Birth Certificate evidencing
paternity, is, in similar vein, said to be irrational, arbitrary,
exclusionary and
prejudicial to B[...].
[22]
It is alleged that the respondent failed to appreciate the prevailing
known
difficulties that arises in such cases. Most children do
not have (or so it is implied) or cannot obtain an Unabridged Birth
Certificate that establishes paternity.
[23]
It is alleged that the respondent should have appreciated that proof
of paternity
(or of adoption) should also be able to be established
by other evidence, not only by submitting an Unabridged Birth
Certificate.
I agree – but such evidence must
establish on a reasonably acceptable basis, who the father is.
What is required is
not a document, but rather facts which enable the
respondent to be satisfied of biological paternity or adoption.
[24]
The applicant has attached to her application, affidavits by the
deceased’s
brother (M[...] S[...] M[...]) and the deceased’s
sister (D[...] G[...] M[...]). The affidavits “confirm”
that the deceased, I[...] M[...] M[...], was the biological father of
B[...].
[25]
No proof is attached that the deceased (B[...]’s alleged
father) actually
paid for B[...]’s education or paid
maintenance for a year before his demise. (The “
Global
Education Claim”
-form, attached to an email on 12 January
2018 (see annexure “AA3” to the founding affidavit)
requires proof that the
member was paying school fees or Maintenance
Orders and proof of maintenance payments is only required for “
6
months prior to the member’s passing”
.)
Nothing at present turns on this.
[26]
To be entitled to an order directing the respondent to pay benefits
in accordance
with the Educational Plan under Policy Number 8[...],
the applicant must advance facts that drive one not only to the
conclusion
that the respondent ought to have been reasonably
satisfied of paternity, but also that the other pre-requisites in the
contract
are established.
REVIEWABLE:
[27]
If it be assumed that the applicant does have
locus standi
, be
it in personal and/or her representative capacity, the question
arises if the decision by the respondent to reject the claim,
is
contractual (i.e. not in the domain of public law and thus not
subject to review).
[28]
In my view, the respondent was quite entitled to stipulate as
contractual pre-condition
for payment of benefits under the policy,
that it be provided with an Unabridged Birth Certificate that
establishes paternity.
The difficulties allegedly encountered
with the Department of Home Affairs in this regard, are to be
resolved with the Department.
The respondent is not on record
as stating that it is unamenable to proof of paternity by means other
than the Unabridged Birth
Certificate.
[29]
The
“decision” of the respondent not to provide the benefits
of the policy until proved by an Unabridged Birth Certificate,
was
the stipulation of a private party in contract – not subject to
a judicial review. The
Multichoice
Support Services (Pty) Ltd
case finds application.
[2]
SPECIFIC
PERFORMANCE/PAYMENT:
[30]
If the relief sought in prayer 2 of the Notice of Motion is regarded
as unrelated
and separate to the purported review application (i.e.
be seen as a demand for payment/specific performance), the applicant
has
failed to establish the paternity of B[...]. The affidavits
submitted do not pass muster. They are in my view too sketchy.
There is moreover no proof that the employee, before his demise,
actually paid (be it for 12 months or for 6 months) for the
education or actually contributed to the maintenance of B[...].
POSTPONEMENT:
[31]
The appellant’s counsel appealed to my sympathies to let the
matter stand
– to give the applicant chance to prove to
respondent the paternity. In view of the problem as to
locus
standi
, I decline to do so.
RESULT:
[32]
In the result the application falls to be dismissed. The
applicant, acting
on behalf of her minor daughter, has seemingly not
been assisted, as one would expect, by the erstwhile employer (nor by
its broker/s).
She elected to attempt to secure benefits under
the policy on her own bat. I am not inclined to grant any costs
order against
her. Hopefully the situation can still be
salvaged, but that is not possible in these proceedings.
[33]
The application is thus dismissed. No order is made as to
costs.
WILLIAMS
AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
heard :
15 April 2024
Date
of judgment :
26 September 2024
Representation
for the applicant :
Mr
Matsobane Elias Makgopa
Instructed
by Shapiro & Ledwaba Inc.
Representation for
the respondent :
Adv L M Spiller
Instructed
by Keith Sutcliffe & Associates Inc.
[1]
2001 (2) SA
166 (WLD).
## [2]Multichoice
Support Services (Pty) Ltd MultiChoice Support Services (Pty)
Ltd v
Calvin Electronics t/a Batavia Trading and Another (case no 296/2020
and 226/2021) [2021] ZASCA 143 at paras 14 to 17 –
see further
Greys Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public
Works and Others); 2005 (6) SA 313 (SCA); 2005 (10)
BCLR 931 (SCA)
(13 May 2005)
[2]
Multichoice
Support Services (Pty) Ltd MultiChoice Support Services (Pty)
Ltd v
Calvin Electronics t/a Batavia Trading and Another (case no 296/2020
and 226/2021) [2021] ZASCA 143 at paras 14 to 17 –
see further
Greys Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public
Works and Others); 2005 (6) SA 313 (SCA); 2005 (10)
BCLR 931 (SCA)
(13 May 2005)
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