Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 260South Africa
Le Bonheur Wine Estate (Pty) Ltd v Stellenbosch Vineyards (Pty) Ltd (17111/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 260; [2025] 3 All SA 768 (WCC); 2025 (5) SA 458 (WCC) (20 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Insurance law – disclosure of subrogated claims – subrogation as a separate cause of action – meaning and effect of insurer stepping into the shoes of an indemnified insured – nature and extent of the transfer of rights from an indemnified insured to an insurer – effect of insurer electing to litigate in an insured’s name – indemnified insured terminating the mandate of attorneys acting for the subrogated insurer’s benefit – insurer disputing the validity of the termination – rule 16 interpreted and rule 30 discussed
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Le Bonheur Wine Estate (Pty) Ltd v Stellenbosch Vineyards (Pty) Ltd (17111/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 260; [2025] 3 All SA 768 (WCC); 2025 (5) SA 458 (WCC) (20 June 2025)
Le Bonheur Wine Estate (Pty) Ltd v Stellenbosch Vineyards (Pty) Ltd (17111/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 260; [2025] 3 All SA 768 (WCC); 2025 (5) SA 458 (WCC) (20 June 2025)
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sino date 20 June 2025
SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or
witnesses have been redacted from this document in compliance with
the law and SAFLII Policy
FLYNOTES:
INSURANCE
– Fire loss –
Subrogation
–
Substitution
notice – Subrogation does not transfer substantive or
procedural rights from insured to insurer –
Grants insurer a
right of reimbursement – Formal plaintiff retained
procedural rights – Included authority to
appoint and
dismiss attorneys – Retained right to terminate mandate and
appoint new legal representation – Rendered
substitution
notice valid – Insurer’s financial interest warranted
joinder to protect subrogation claim –
Application
dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
###
Reportable
CASE
NO
: 17111/2021
In
the matter between:-
LE
BONHEUR WINE ESTATE (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF
and
STELLENBOSCH
VINEYARDS (PTY) LTD
DEFENDANT
STEPHANUS
JACOBUS NEETHLING
FIRST THIRD PARTY
FANIE
NEETHLING BEDRYSINGINEUR
SECOND THIRD PARTY
Coram
:
MOOSA AJ
Heard
:
2, 4 JUNE 2025
Delivered
:
20 JUNE 2025 (delivered electronically
to the parties)
Summary
:
Insurance law – disclosure
of subrogated claims –
subrogation as a separate cause of action – meaning and effect
of insurer stepping into the
shoes of an indemnified insured –
nature and extent of the transfer of rights from an indemnified
insured to an insurer –
effect of insurer electing to litigate
in an insured’s name – indemnified insured terminating
the mandate of attorneys
acting for the subrogated insurer’s
benefit – insurer disputing the validity of the termination –
rule 16 interpreted
and rule 30 discussed
ORDER
1.
The application by Hollard Insurance Company Ltd (Hollard) is
dismissed with costs, such costs for Plaintiff’s counsel shall
be on tariff Scale C.
2.
Hollard is, with immediate effect, joined as a co-Plaintiff
to the
main action. Hollard will be the ‘Second Plaintiff’ and
Le Bonheur Wine Estate the ‘First Plaintiff’.
3.
Hollard is granted 30 court days from date of this order to
file a
notice to amend the Combined Summons and Particulars of Claim in all
necessary respects.
4.
Before the lapse of the period referred to in (3) above and
pending
the effecting of the amendments envisaged in (3) if notice thereof is
given, the main action may not be withdrawn by La
Bonheur or anyone
acting on its behalf, nor may the defendant’s dismissal
application and the trial in the main action be
enrolled for hearing.
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1]
This judgment relates to an application by Hollard Insurance Co Ltd,
registration
no. 1952/003004/06, t/a Hollar Insure (Hollard)
represented by Clyde & Co Inc (Clyde & Co). The application
is against
Le Bonheur Wine Estate (Pty) Ltd (Le Bonheur). The
application raises significant legal questions regarding the inner
workings
of the doctrine of subrogation in indemnity insurance
litigation.
[2]
The trial in the action (the main action) was scheduled to commence
on 2 June 2025.
On the eve of the trial, the defendant served a
substantial urgent application. It comprised 129 pages. Within 24
hours, after
opposing and replying papers were filed, the pleadings
in the urgent application ballooned to more than 200 pages. The
defendant,
in its notice of motion, sought, inter alia, an order to
dismiss the main action (the dismissal application). The petition
indicated
that the defendant intended to enrol the application for
hearing immediately before the trial was scheduled to start on 2
June.
Within half an hour of the court’s scheduled commencement
time, a last-minute development occurred. Werksmans Attorneys
(Werksmans)
delivered a notice indicating that it was the plaintiff’s
new attorneys of record (the substitution notice). Hollard and its
attorneys, Clyde & Co, objected to this substitution of
attorneys.
[3]
Attached to the substitution notice was a resolution signed by Le
Bonheur’s
directors
(the
directors’ resolution). Owing to its importance for what
happened next in this matter, I quote its contents in full:
‘
RESOLUTION OF THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF LE BONHEUR (PTY) LTD
Adopted
on 30 May 2025.
WHEREAS
Le Bonheur (Pty) Ltd (“the Company”) is a subsidiary of
Advini South Africa (Pty) Ltd (“Advini SA”)
and is
currently cited as the plaintiff in High Court case number 17111/2021
against Stellenbosch Vineyards (Pty) Ltd, the defendant,
(“Stellenbosch Vineyards”) also a subsidiary of Advini
SA;
AND
WHEREAS the Board of Directors of the Company is unanimously of the
view that the claim against Stellenbosch Vineyards has no
foundation
in law, and that it should not have been instituted, and that it is
contrary to the interests of the Company, Stellenbosch
Vineyards, and
the group and of the companies involved, and in conflict with the
agreements concluded between the parties prior
to the fire and
currently applicable, and inconsistent with the governance and
operational principles of Advini SA;
NOW
THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED THAT:
1.
The legal proceedings instituted under case
number 17111/2021 are not
authorised or supported by the Company, and shall be immediately
withdrawn.
2.
Any power of attorney, mandate and/or instruction given to Clyde
&
Co Attorney y Hollard Insurance Company Limited (“Hollard”),
purportedly on behalf of the Company, or any other
legal
representatives involved in such litigation as instructed by Hollard,
is hereby revoked and terminated with immediate effect.
3.
Ms Naretha Smit, in her capacity as a director
of the Company, is
hereby authorised and mandated to:
3.1
notify Clyde & Co of the Company’s decision recorded in
paragraph
2 above;
3.2
appoint Werksmans Attorneys to represent the Company in the action
going forward,
and to instruct them to withdraw the action on the
basis that each party shall bear its own costs;
3.3
do all things necessary to give effect to this resolution.
4.
The Board of Directors further resolves that
no future intra-group
litigation shall be instituted without the prior written approval of
the Board.’
[4]
The directors’ resolution and the substitution notice set the
proverbial ‘cat
among the pigeons’. Needless to say, my
court’s start time on 2 June was delayed as Le Bonheur’s
legal team,
Hollard’s legal team, the defendant’s legal
team, and the third parties’ legal team assessed the situation
and
attempted to reach consensus on the way forward. Unsurprisingly,
that was a bridge too far for them. And so, amidst all this,
the case was finally called in open court.
[5]
At the start of proceedings, Mr Lamplough SC informed me that he
appears for Hollard,
acting on instructions from Clyde & Co. He
informed me that Hollard’s position is that it is the ‘true
plaintiff’
in the main action by virtue of subrogation, having
fully indemnified Le Bonheur for its damages arising from an
insurable event
pursuant to the terms of an insurance contract. Mr
Lamplough further informed me that Hollard challenges the validity of
the termination
of Clyde & Co’s mandate and the appointment
of Werksmans by way of the substitution notice. A notice challenging
the
latter had, by then, been served on Werksmans in terms of rule
30. Mr Lamplough also informed me that Hollard opposes the dismissal
application. Thus, it sought the trial’s postponement and a
hearing of the dismissal application on the semi-urgent roll
of this
Division.
[6]
Mr de Beer then addressed me. He informed me that he acts for the
plaintiff cited
in the pleadings to the main action, namely, Le
Bonheur, and that he is acting on the instructions of Werksmans. He
further informed
me that Le Bonheur terminated Clyde & Co’s
mandate to act in the main action in accordance with its rights in
law, and
that Werksmans was appointed in its stead. As a result of
this, so he proceeded to say, neither Clyde & Co nor its
appointed
counsel, namely, Mr Lamplough, have any authority to appear
in the main action any longer. Mr de Beer stated that Le Bonheur
opposes
the trial’s postponement but does not oppose the
dismissal application.
[7]
Mr Seale SC, (with A Walters) then addressed me. He confirmed that he
acts for Stellenbosch
Vineyards (Pty) Ltd (Stellenbosch Vineyards)
who wishes to proceed with the dismissal application forthwith. He
submitted that
the postponement sought by Mr Lamplough would be
costly for all parties and ought to be refused. Mr Tyler then placed
himself on
record and informed me that he had no further comments to
make.
[8]
I expressed my concern to the above cast of advocates that a
postponement of everything,
as sought by Hollard, would not only be
costly for all parties concerned but also uneconomical use of scarce
judicial resources
allocated to a trial scheduled to proceed over
five days. I ruled that the dismissal application would proceed. I
also encouraged
Mr Lamplough and Mr de Beer to work together with a
view to possibly enrolling the rule 30 application for hearing on any
of the
scheduled trial days.
[9]
The Court extends its gratitude to all the legal practitioners
involved. By agreement,
the hearing of the dismissal application and
the rule 30 application were scheduled for 4 June. Court papers,
including heads of
argument, were filed by 3 June.
[10]
I express my thanks to all counsel for their detailed heads. Their
submissions were helpful in
its traversing of key questions arising
from the doctrine of subrogation.
[11]
On 4 June, and by further agreement between the protagonists, the
dismissal application and the
trial were postponed sine die with all
cost issues being reserved for later determination. Hence, this
judgment only relates to
Hollard’s application.
Hollard’s
challenge to the substitution notice
[12]
Hollard is not cited as a litigant in the pleadings to the main
action. Despite Mr de Beer’s
submission that Hollard lacks
standing, I directed that its counsel is entitled to present
Hollard’s application for relief
based on Hollard’s
contention that, as a matter of fact and law, it is the ‘true
plaintiff’ in the main action
(not Le Bonheur). As support for
my position regarding the procedure and the relaxation of any
relevant court rules in the interests
of justice, I rely on the
following instructive dicta from
Eke v Parsons
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC):
‘
[39]
… Where the interests of justice so dictate, courts may depart
from a strict observance of the
rules. That, even where one of the
litigants is insistent that there be adherence to the rules.
Not surprisingly, courts
have often said “[i]t is trite that
the rules exist for the courts, and not the courts for the rules”.
[40] Under our
constitutional dispensation, the object of court rules is twofold.
The first is to ensure a fair trial or hearing.
The second is to
“secure the inexpensive and expeditious completion of
litigation and … to further the administration
of justice”.
I have already touched on the inherent jurisdiction vested in the
superior courts in South Africa.
In terms of this power, the
High Court has always been able to regulate its own proceedings for a
number of reasons, including
catering for circumstances not
adequately covered by the Uniform Rules, and generally ensuring the
efficient administration of
the courts’ judicial functions.’
(Footnotes omitted)
[13]
In relevant part, Hollard’s notice of motion reads:
‘
KINDLY TAKE
NOTICE THAT
the plaintiff intends to apply on Wednesday 4 June 2025 at 11h00, for
the following order:
1
The notice of substitution as attorney of record filed by Werksmans
Attorneys
on
2 June 2025, by means of which Werksmans Attorneys purport to
substitute themselves for Clyde & Co as attorneys of record
for
the plaintiff, is set aside as irregular.
2
Additionally or alternatively to the order in 1 above, the notice of
substitution as attorney of record filed by Werksmans Attorneys on 2
June 2025, by means of which Werksmans Attorneys purport to
substitute themselves for Clyde & Co as attorney for the
plaintiff, is declared to be legally ineffective and to have no
juristic
force or consequence.
3
It is declared that Clyde & Co is the appointed attorney of
record for
the plaintiff, and is entitled to prosecute the action
under this case number on the instructions of and for the benefit of
Hollard
Insurance Company Limited in the name of the plaintiff.’
[14]
Hollard seeks relief under rule 30, alternatively it seeks
declaratory relief in its alleged
capacity qua plaintiff suing in Le
Bonheur’s name. In support of its application, Hollard relies,
inter alia, on the facts
pleaded in its answering affidavit in the
dismissal application. Since Hollard’s petition was opposed by
Le Bonheur on points
of law only, no answering papers were filed.
Therefore, the facts averred in Hollard’s affidavit used in
support of its application
are common cause as between it and Le
Bonheur.
[15]
Although Stellenbosch Vineyards had no direct interest in Hollard’s
application, Mr Seale
sought my indulgence. He requested an
opportunity to make submissions which he believed may be helpful to
the Court. In keeping
with the best traditions of the Bar and the
collegial spirit in which the matter before me was argued, both Mr
Lamplough and Mr
de Beer had no objection to Mr Seale being indulged.
As a result, Mr Seale made submissions which elicited a short reply
from Mr
Lamplough.
Issues
arising for adjudication
[16]
The application by Hollard raises the following issues for
determination:
(a) First, whether
the substitution notice constitutes an irregular step under rule 30
and falls to be set aside in terms
thereof;
(b) Secondly, and
regardless of the outcome in (a), whether Le Bonheur is, in law,
entitled to file the substitution notice
under rule 16. This depends
on whether Le Bonheur (or Hollard) is the plaintiff ‘party’
in the main action; and
(c) Thirdly, and
only if the issue in (b) is decided in Le Bonheur’s favour,
then the issue arises whether any substitution
of attorneys would be
ineffective by virtue of the common law doctrine of subrogation. This
issue requires a determination of whether
that doctrine results in
Hollard taking transfer of Le Bonheur’s procedural rights in
its claim against Stellenbosch Vineyards,
thereby granting only
Hollard (
not Le Bonheur
) the authority to appoint attorneys to
act in the main action and to terminate their mandate to act.
[17]
Each of these issues is discussed below. To do so requires a
narration of the salient common
cause facts. These are distilled from
Le Bonheur’s summons in the main action and from Hollard’s
answering affidavit
in the dismissal application.
Relevant
facts for adjudication of Hollard’s challenge to the
substitution notice
[18]
On or about 11 January 2017, a written warehousing storage and
services agreement (the warehousing
agreement) was concluded between
Le Bonheur and Stellenbosch Vineyards. In accordance with that
agreement, Le Bonheur took occupation
of certain commercial premises
owned by Stellenbosch Vineyards located at Welmoed Winery, R310
Lynedoch/Baden Powell Drive in the
district of Stellenbosch. On 23
October 2018, and while Le Bonheur’s goods were being stored at
these premises for reward,
a fire broke out which caused Le Bonheur
to suffer a loss of its inventory. The value of its losses caused by,
and/or associated
with, the fire was quantified to be R12 643 936,05.
These damages form the subject of the lawsuit in the main action
against Stellenbosch Vineyards.
[19]
At all material times to the fire occurring at the defendant’s
warehouse, a contract of
insurance existed between Le Bonheur and
Hollard with policy no. S[...] (the insurance policy). Pursuant to
its loss of inventory
in the fire, which loss was covered by the
insurance policy, Le Bonheur lodged an insurance claim with reference
S[...]2. Hollard
indemnified Le Bonheur fully for its losses.
[20]
In 2020, Clyde & Co were appointed by Hollard for purposes of
investigating the merits of
a claim against the third-party
wrongdoer. To that end, on 20 October 2020, Clyde & Co sent an
email to Le Bonheur requesting
some information. These were provided
by Le Bonheur. In that email, the following was written by Clyde &
Co:
‘
We confirm that we
act on behalf of your insurer, Hollard Insurance Company Ltd (
our
client
)
in considering a potential recovery in the names of L’ Avenir
Wine Estate and Le Bonheur Wine Estate (
you
)
against Stellenbosch Vineyards (Pty) Ltd (
Stellenbosch
Vineyards
)
and/or Quality Bottling Services (
QBS)
in respect of a devastating fire that occurred at Stellenbosch
Vineyards’ premises on the morning of the 23 October 2018
(
the
fire
).
You lodged claims with
our client for losses under your respective insurance policy and our
client, in terms of an agreement of
loss, indemnified you in the
amounts of R4 681 194.00 and R12 643 936.05
respectively.
Our client now seeks
to recover these amounts from Stellenbosch Vineyards and/or QBS by
virtue of the doctrine of subrogation. In
an insurance context, an
insurer who has indemnified an insured is entitled to claim, in the
name of the insured (i.e. you), from
the wrongdoer (i.e. Stellenbosch
Vineyards or QBS) and in essence entails the insurer stepping into
the shoes of the insured against
the wrongdoer.
…’
(Emphasis added)
[21]
On 23 June 2021, and following the conclusion of its inquiry, Clyde &
Co issued a letter
of demand to Stellenbosch Vineyards demanding
payment of R12 643 936,05 to ‘compensate our client
for its loss’.
The letter of demand informed the addressee in
paragraph 1 that Clyde & Co ‘act for Le Bonheur Wine Estate
(Pty) Ltd
(
our client
)’. Paragraph 12 read: ‘Our
client holds you liable for the loss it sustained.’ The final
paragraph read: ‘Our
client’s rights are reserved.’
Accordingly, I find that, at that time, Clyde & Co acted for two
principals with
aligned interests: Hollard and Le Bonheur.
[22]
I pause to mention that, despite paragraph 16 of
the letter of demand calling upon Stellenbosch Vineyards
to forward
the letter to its insurers ‘if you are insured’, the
letter of demand (and the subsequent summons) made
no mention of the
following: (i) Le Bonheur was insured for the losses suffered; (ii)
Le Bonheur had been indemnified by its insurer;
(iii) Le
Bonheur’s claim was subrogated in favour of its insurer;
and (iv) the insurer of Le Bonheur is seeking
a reimbursement
pursuant to its right of subrogation and that the claim against
Stellenbosch Vineyards is being pursued in Le Bonheur’s
name as
the insured. I revert later to the non-disclosure aspect when
discussing how this practice is inconsistent with the constitutional
value of openness and ‘the requirement of transparency that
underlies all litigation’ (
Rand Mutual Assurance Co (Pty)
Ltd v RAF
[2008] ZASCA 114
;
2008 (6) SA 511
(SCA) para 23). In my view, the
practice of non-disclosure of the foregoing material facts ought not
to be tolerated.
[23]
Pursuant to Stellenbosch Vineyards’ failure to comply with the
demand, an action was launched
as foreshadowed in Le Bonheur’s
letter of demand. Its citation in the particulars of claim (the POC),
which follows the citation
in the summons, reads:
‘
The Plaintiff is
LE
BONHEUR WINE ESTATE (PTY) LTD
,
a company incorporated in accordance with the laws of South Africa,
with registration number 2016/320022/07 and having its registered
address and principal place of business at L’ Avenir Wine
Estate, R44 Klapmuts Road, Stellenbosch, Western Cape.’
[24]
As with the letter of demand, the POC makes no reference to the
insurance policy, nor to the
compensation paid to Le Bonheur, nor to
the fact that the claim is subrogated and being pursued by Hollard in
the cited plaintiff’s
name. Instead, after pleading its causes
of action, Le Bonheur (
not Hollard
) alleges and claims:
’
10.
The
defendant
is liable to pay the plaintiff
the value of the said wine in an amount of R12 452 637.00.
…
14.
In the premises
the defendant is liable to pay the plaintiff
the amount of these additional costs as damages.
15.
The
defendant’s total liability to the plaintiff
is for
payment of R12 643 936.05.
16.
Despite demand made on 23 June 2021, the defendant has failed and/or
refused to pay the
sum of R12 643 936.05
to the
plaintiff
. …
WHEREFORE
the
plaintiff
claims:
1.
Judgment against the defendant for payment of R12 643 936.05.
…’
(Emphasis added)
[25]
The summons and the POC is signed by Clyde & Co in its capacity
as ‘Attorneys for the
Plaintiff’. Accordingly, ex facie
the summons and the POC, Clyde & Co represented to this Court and
its Registrar, and
to the defendant (and the public at large) that it
is Le Bonheur’s attorney and sues on its behalf and for its
benefit. All
other notices filed by Clyde & Co in the main action
is to the same legal and factual effect.
[26]
The first time that Clyde & Co referenced the subrogation and
that it acts on instructions
of Hollard is in the notice delivered
under rule 30(2)(
b
) dated 2 June 2025 in response to the
substitution notice. The relevant part of the rule 30(2) notice
reads:
‘
BE PLEASED TO
TAKE NOTICE THAT
the notice of substitution, served via email on Monday 2 June 2025 at
09:16 by Werksman Attorneys, constitutes an irregular step
by reason
of the plaintiff, being represented by Clyde & Co on instructions
of Hollard Insurance Company Limited,
consequent
on the principle of subrogation, as contractually entitled to in the
relevant insurance policy and common law
.
Such purported
substitution is impermissible and irregular, which this Honourable
court should set aside.’ (Emphasis
added)
[27]
Hollard’s reliance on the principle of subrogation was then
amplified in its notice of
application filed in support of the
application before me (i.e., the rule 30 irregular step application,
alternatively for declaratory
relief). The relevant part of Hollard’s
notice reads:
‘
TAKE NOTICE
THAT
the plaintiff will rely, in support of the application, on:
i.
The fact that The Hollard Insurance Company Limited,
the insurer of
Le Bonheur, has indemnified Le Bonheur for the loss described in the
particulars of claim in this action;
ii.
The fact that Hollard has not authorised Werksmans Attorneys
to file
the notice of substitution as attorneys of record dated 2 June 2025
and does not authorise Werksmans to represent the plaintiff
or to
prosecute the further conduct of the action;
iii.
The fact that The Hollard Insurance Company Limited has authorised,
and continues to authorise, Clyde & Co to prosecute the action
under this case number in the name of Le Bonheur for the benefit
of
The Hollard Insurance Company Limited; …’
[28]
It is common cause that the claim of Le Bonheur against Stellenbosch
Vineyards for damages suffered
by the former as a result of the fire
is capable of being subrogated in terms of the insurance policy. The
rule 30(2)(
b
) notice quoted above in paragraph [26] records
that Hollard seeks a setting aside of the substitution notice by
virtue of its rights
flowing ex lege pursuant to the operation of the
principle of subrogation as it is ‘contractually entitled to’.
This
is a reference to general condition no. 9 in the insurance
policy. That clause is headed ‘COMPANY’S RIGHTS AFTER AN
EVENT’. In this context, ‘Company’ means Hollard.
The clause in question reads:
## ‘(a)
On the happening of any event in respect of which a claim is or may
be made under this Policy,
the Company and every person authorised by
them may, without thereby incurring any liability and without
diminishing the right
of the Company to rely upon any conditions of
this Policy
‘
(a)
On the happening of any event in respect of which a claim is or may
be made under this Policy,
the Company and every person authorised by
them may, without thereby incurring any liability and without
diminishing the right
of the Company to rely upon any conditions of
this Policy
### (i)
…
(i)
…
(ii)
take over and conduct in the name of the Insured the defence or
settlement
of any claim and 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. No admission, statement, offer,
promise,
payment or indemnity shall be made by the Insured without the written
consent of the Company.
(b)
The Insured shall, at the expense of the Company, do and permit to
be done all such things as may be necessary or reasonably required
by
the Company for the purpose of enforcing any rights to which the
Company shall be, or would become, subrogated upon indemnification
of
the Insured whether such things shall be required before or after
such indemnification
…’ (Emphasis added)
[29]
As is evident from the grounds averred in support of Hollard’s
application, it is launched
as a response to the substitution notice
delivered by Werksmans. That notice was merely an implementation of
the directors’
resolution quoted above in paragraph [3]. The
latter development requires some context. In recent years, Le Bonheur
and Stellenbosch
Vineyards became wholly owned subsidiaries of Advini
South Africa (Pty) Ltd. As a result, Le Bonheur and Stellenbosch
Vineyards
share common directors, as well as share common commercial
interests and objectives.
[30]
The directors’ resolution reveals that the main action between
sister companies is viewed
as being detrimental to the group’s
best interest. Therefore, Le Bonheur’s directors resolved to
end the main action.
Acting on Hollard’s instructions, Clyde &
Co refused to comply with Le Bonheur’s instructions, despite
being the
latter’s attorney and agent. Hence, its mandate was
revoked. Werksmans was appointed so that Le Bonheur could control the
levers of the litigation and withdraw the main action. Nothing
precludes Hollard from pursuing its subrogated claim through any
other way permitted by law. Therefore, Hollard is not without remedy
if the substitution notice is held to be valid. At the hearing,
Mr
Lamplough accepted this as the correct legal position.
Issue
1: Is the substitution notice an irregular step under rule 30?
[31]
Rule 30(3) empowers a high court to set aside a ‘proceeding or
step’ which, in the
court’s opinion, is ‘irregular
or improper’. It is trite law that rule 30 may only be invoked
when a complaint
relates to an irregularity in the form of a
proceeding or step taken, rather than in relation to a matter of
substance. See
Singh v Vorkel
1947 (3) SA 400
(C) at
406;
Odendaal v De Jager
1961 (4) SA 307
(O) at 310F-G.
[32]
For the reasons that follow, I find that Hollard’s complaint
regarding the substitution
notice served pursuant to rule 16 fails to
meet the threshold requirements for a legally effective invocation of
rule 30.
[33]
A notice appointing a new firm of attorneys could potentially be the
focus of a rule 30 complaint.
Such a notice advances an action and,
as this case shows, may bring the action one step closer to finality.
See
Cyril Smiedt (Pty) Ltd v Lourens
1966 (1) SA 150
(O)
at 152E;
Market Dynamics (Pty) Ltd t/a Brian Ferris v
Grögor
1984 (1) SA 152
(W) at 153C. Undoubtedly, the
substitution of Clyde & Co with Werksmans will lead to the main
action being withdrawn - this
is expressly resolved in the directors’
resolution. Werksmans has been appointed to ensure that a notice of
withdrawal of
the main action is delivered.
[34]
Hollard’s complaint is
not
that the substitution notice
is defective in form or content. Rather, the grounds of its complaint
traversed in its rule 30(2)(
b
) notice (see above in paragraph
[26]) is that the substitution notice constitutes an irregular step
as it allegedly infringes upon
Hollard’s rights ‘consequent
on the principle of subrogation, as contractually entitled to in the
relevant insurance
policy and common law’. Put differently,
Hollard’s complaint is that the substitution notice violates
its right to
mandate the attorney of its choice to prosecute its
subrogated claim against Stellenbosch Vineyards.
[35]
Quite evidently, Hollard’s complaint does not fall within the
purview of rule 30. Consequently,
the relief it seeks in terms of
rule 30 is unsustainable and is refused.
Issue
2: Is Le Bonheur or Hollard the plaintiff ‘party’ in the
main action?
[36]
This question holds significance as it will determine whether Le
Bonheur was entitled to cancel
Clyde & Co’s mandate in the
main action, subsequently leading to Werksmans delivering the
substitution notice pursuant
to rule 16(2).
[37]
Mr Lamplough advanced the core thesis underpinning his argument as
follows: He submitted that
it matters not an iota that Hollard’s
name does not appear anywhere in the pleadings, or on any of the
notices filed pursuant
to the rules of court. He submitted that, by
virtue of subrogation, Hollard is the real plaintiff ex lege,
regardless of how the
plaintiff is described in the combined summons
and the POC, and regardless that Hollard’s name is wholly
absent from the
pleadings. He argued that Hollard’s details
must be read into all court documents by necessary implication.
[38]
This is a novel perspective. I engaged Mr Lamplough on the
implications of Hollard being recognised
as the ‘plaintiff’
despite not being joined as a ‘party’. I enquired whether
this extends to a court order
in Le Bonheur’s favour. In other
words, assuming judgment is granted in favour of Le Bonheur as the
cited plaintiff, and
the trial court directs the defendant to pay La
Bonheur the amount claimed, then would the court order be a judgment
in favour
of Hollard, even though its name would not appear anywhere
in the court’s order as judgment creditor? Mr Lamplough’s
answer is ‘yes’. He submitted that this is how subrogated
claims work when an insurer steps into the shoes of an indemnified
insured. He argued that the usual rules applicable to interpreting
court orders (see
Eke v Parsons
supra) do not preclude such an
interpretive result. I disagree. I can find no legal basis for this,
and none were cited by Mr Lamplough
either. This is unsurprising in
view of the trite legal position regulating the interpretation of
documents, such as, pleadings,
notices, and court orders.
[39]
Mr Lamplough’s aforementioned argument is to the effect that
the legal consequences flowing
from Le Bonheur’s claim being
subrogated are, to some extent, interwoven with the basis for the
submission that Le Bonheur
lacks the right to terminate Clyde &
Co’s mandate. Consequently, his argument also implies that Le
Bonheur does not possess
the procedural right under rule 16(2) to
issue a notice of substitution in favour of Werksmans. I now proceed
to deal with this
issue.
[40]
Under the next heading, I focus on the issue of whether a transfer of
procedural rights ensues
when subrogation occurs. In the present
context, I deal only with those aspects of Mr Lamplough’s
submissions which are germane
to the application of rule 16(2) and a
determination of whether the cancellation of Clyde & Co’s
mandate, along with
the subsequent filing of the substitution notice,
is valid and legally effective.
[41]
This necessitates a discussion of rules 16(1) and (2), and their
application to the facts of
this case. For present purposes, the
relevant extracts of rule 16 reads:
‘
(1) If an attorney
acts on behalf of
any
party
in any proceedings, such attorney shall notify all other parties of
this fact and shall supply an address where documents in the
proceedings may be served.
(2)
(a)
Any
party
represented by an attorney in any proceedings
may at any
time,
subject to the provisions of rule 40,
terminate such
attorney’s authority to act
, and may thereafter act in
person or appoint another attorney to act in the proceedings,
whereupon
such party
or the newly appointed attorney
on
behalf of such party
shall
forthwith give notice to the
registrar and to all other parties of the termination of the former
attorney’s authority
, and if
such party
has
appointed a further attorney to act in the proceedings,
such party
or the newly appointed attorney on behalf of
such party
shall
give the name and address of the attorney so appointed. …’
(Emphasis added)
[42]
Mr de Beer argues that rule 16(1) and (2) applies to a litigant who
is cited as a ‘party’
in the pleadings. He contends that,
based on the facts of this matter, rule 16(1) and (2) apply to Le
Bonheur (not Hollard). Mr
Lamplough, on the other hand, contends
that, in the context of insurance litigation involving subrogation,
the concept of ‘party’
in rules 16(1) and (2) encompass
an insurer (i.e., Hollard) who sues in an indemnified insured’s
name (i.e., Le Bonheur)
because, in the eyes of the law, the former
steps into the shoes of the latter. Resolving this dispute requires
an interpretation
of the term ‘party’ as it appears in
rule 16(2).
[43]
There is scant case law reported on rule 16(2). Neither I nor any of
the parties’ counsel
were able to find any precedent which is
on all fours with the facts and circumstances in casu. The issues
arising here are novel
and are significant in the area of indemnity
insurance litigation which occur daily in courts nationally. This
situation necessitates
judicial scrutiny of the relevant law and its
practical implications.
[44]
As a point of departure, the legal status of the Uniform Rules
require recital. They are framed
by the Rules Board for Courts of Law
pursuant to powers granted by Parliament in the Rules Board for
Courts of Law Act 107 of 1985.
The Uniform Rules, along with any
amendment thereto, have the force of law by promulgation through
publication in the Government
Gazette. This occurs after the rules
are approved by the relevant Cabinet Minister for Justice. As such,
the Uniform Rules (like
all other rules of court) constitute
delegated legislation - they are subordinate legislation with
statutory force. See
Computer Brilliance CC v Swanepoel
2005
(4) SA 433
(T) at 442.
[45]
Section 8(1) of the Interpretation Act 33 of 1957 (Interpretation
Act) states that the rules
of court regulate the ‘practice and
procedure of that court’ to which the rules relate. In
CT v
MT and Others
2020 (3) SA 409
(WCC) para 19, Rogers J affirmed
that ‘rules of court … do not lay down substantive law’.
They confer procedural
rights only. See
Mukaddam v Pioneer Foods
(Pty) Ltd
2013 (5) SA 89
(CC) para 31.
[46]
Corbett JA, in
Universal City Studios Inc and Others v
Network Video (Pty) Ltd
[1986] ZASCA 3
;
1986 (2) SA 734
(A) at 754H-I
remarked that ‘the dividing line between substantive and
adjectival law is not always an easy one to draw’.
Corbett JA
then embraced the following distinction composed by Salmond
in
Jurisprudence
11th ed at 504:
'Substantive law is
concerned with the ends which the administration of justice seeks;
procedural law deals with the means and instruments
by which those
ends are to be attained.'
[47]
Since the Uniform Rules form part of procedural (i.e., adjectival)
law, none of its provisions
can be interpreted as conferring on
Hollard a substantive right to claim payment from Stellenbosch
Vineyards. Moreover, nor can
any court rule be interpreted as
conferring a right on Hollard to be recognised as a litigant who
stands in Le Bonheur’s
legal shoes; nor can any court rule be
interpreted in a way that confers a claim or entitlement to Hollard
for damages awarded
to Le Bonheur in any court order. See
Fair v
SA Eagle Insurance Co Ltd
1995 (4) SA 96
(E) at 99.
[48]
When interpreting court rules, the process and the legal principles
which apply are the same
as that used when legislation are generally
construed. Interpretation is an objective exercise in a unitary
process. In other words,
it does not occur in stages. Interpretation
entails a cohesive analysis of a text, having regard to its language
and context (both
internal and external context), and its purpose
viewed within its specific contextual environment and surrounds.
Court rules are
also to be interpreted through the prism of the
Constitution and its values. See
Social Justice Coalition and
Others v Minister of Police and Others
2022 (10) BCLR 1267
(CC)
paras 51 - 65.
[49]
The term ‘party’ is used multiple times in rules 16(1)
and (2). Rule 1 provides definitions
for terms used in the Uniform
Rules. The meanings assigned in rule 1 apply whenever any term
defined therein is used in a court
rule, ‘unless the context
otherwise indicates’. Rule 1 provides that ‘“party” or
any reference
to a plaintiff or other litigant in terms, includes
such party’s attorney with or without an advocate, as the
context may
require’. This definition applies to the term
‘party’ in the context of rules 16(1) and (2).
[50]
The heading of rule 16 is ‘Representation of parties’.
The heading is a legitimate
aide in the interpretation of a court
rule. See
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Friedman
2024
(3) SA 171
(WCC) para 44 (and the authorities cited at footnote 15).
Quite evidently from its heading and the contents of its body, rules
16(1) and (2) deal with the representation of litigants in ‘any
proceeding’ before a high court. In other words, their
provisions are designed to regulate the representation of persons
involved in an action or application as plaintiff/applicant or
as
defendant/respondent.
[51]
Rule 16 functions within the broader scheme of the Uniform Rules.
Under rules 18(1) and 17(3)(
a
), if a ‘party’ sues
and is represented by an attorney when the summons is issued, the
summons must be signed by the
litigating party or its attorney.
Consistent with the letter of demand which had indicated that Clyde &
Co acts for Le Bonheur,
Clyde & Co signed the summons and the POC
in its capacity as the attorneys acting for Le Bonheur as plaintiff.
Clyde &
Co did not sign this pleading for Hollard.
[52]
In terms of rule 7, an attorney can only act for a ‘party’
who is properly before
court if the attorney is duly authorised to
act by virtue of a valid power of attorney in its favour. Although
rule 7(1) does not
make it obligatory for the power of attorney to be
filed at court, the document must nevertheless exist because a cited
defendant
may, within prescribed time limits, call on the attorney to
prove his/her authority to act.
[53]
Rule 7 read with rule 16(2) make it plain that a firm of attorneys
(such as, Clyde & Co for
Le Bonheur) must have a mandate from the
cited plaintiff in order to continue to act while the proceedings are
ongoing. If not,
then the attorney must cease to act.
[54]
An attorney’s mandate may be terminated
at any time
. See
Pugin v Pugin
1963 (1) SA 791
(W) at 793F. This is consistent
with the common law position - an agent’s authority to act for
a principal may be terminated
(revoked) by the latter whenever a
principal deems it fit to do so. When that eventuality materialises,
then an attorney, acting
as agent of his/her client as principal is,
by operation of law, no longer empowered to carry out any function(s)
ordinarily performed
by an attorney with authority. This includes,
but is not limited to, an attorney not being entitled to accept
service of process
in the pending litigation, nor to appear in court
on behalf of a client who has cancelled the attorney’s
authority to act.
See
Pugin
supra at 794A - 795F.
[55]
The importance of an attorney having an authority to act cannot be
overstated. The question of
authority has been litigated repeatedly,
especially regarding the power of an attorney to validly settle or
compromise a lawsuit.
See, for e.g.,
MEC
for Economic Affairs, Environment & Tourism: Eastern Cape v
Kruizenga and Another
2010 (4) SA 122
(SCA); and
Cloete v Van Zyl
(3384/2017) [2024] ZAECMKHC
48 (2 May 2024)
.
[56]
This is pertinent in casu because the directors’ resolution
expressly authorise Werksmans
to withdraw the main action where Le
Bonheur is the cited ‘plaintiff’, provided the withdrawal
occurs ‘on the
basis that
each
party shall bear its own costs’. To give effect to this
intention will involve negotiations between the attorneys for
Le
Bonheur and Stellenbosch Vineyards. That, in turn, requires a valid
mandate to settle the case on the basis indicated. Clyde
& Co
does not have such a mandate.
[57]
It is undisputed that Le Bonheur greenlighted the main action.
However, it has withdrawn its
consent to litigate and revoked Clyde &
Co’s authority to continue acting on its behalf. Usually, this
would be the end
of the matter. But Hollard rejects this.
[58]
Hollard’s counsel argues that, under the rules of court
properly interpreted, Hollard is
the ‘true plaintiff’ in
the main action. For the further reasons enumerated in the succeeding
paragraphs (i.e., over
and above those discussed above), I disagree.
[59]
In terms of rule 17(1), ‘[e]very person making a claim against
any other person may …
sue out a summons or a combined
summons’. In this context, the term ‘person’ bears
its broad meaning as defined
in s 2 of the Interpretation Act. That
definition includes within its ambit the following categories of
juristic entities:
‘
(
b
)
any company incorporated or registered as such under any law;
(
c
)
any body of persons, corporate or unincorporate’.
[60]
Rule 18(2) provides that in an action proceeding, the ‘party’
suing and the ‘party’
being sued must be ‘described’
in the summons or combined summons (as the case may be). Rule 18(10)
states that ‘[a]
plaintiff suing for damages shall set them out
in such manner as will enable the defendant reasonably to assess the
quantum thereof’.
[61]
An application of the provisions in rules 17 and 18 when properly
interpreted leads me to the
ineluctable conclusion that the ‘party’
suing Stellenbosch Vineyards for damages is the private company
‘described’
in the combined summons and the POC as the
plaintiff, namely, Le Bonheur. See above in paragraphs [23] and [24].
[62]
Rule 15 prescribes a procedure by which the identity of a litigating
‘party’ before
court may be altered owing to a material
change in his/her/its legal status (such as, through death or
insolvency or liquidation;
or a minor reaching the age of majority
who wishes to substitute a guardian that, in terms of a recognised
rule of procedure, sued
in the guardian’s name for the benefit
of a disclosed (i.e., named) minor child).
[63]
There is no rule of procedure which allows one registered company
(i.e., Hollard) to sue a defendant
(i.e., Stellenbosch Vineyards) for
damages in the name of another registered company (i.e., Le Bonheur).
The absence of such a
procedural rule is consistent with the
principle that, under our law, every registered company possess its
own corporate identity
and separate juristic personality. See
Ex
parte Gore NO and Others NNO (in their capacities as the liquidators
of 41 companies comprising King Financial Holdings Ltd (in
liquidation) and its subsidiaries)
[2013] 2 All SA 437
(WCC).
[64]
In
Venator Africa (Pty) Ltd v Watts and Another
2024 (4) SA
539
(SCA) para 24, Mabindla-Boqwana JA reaffirmed
the
long-standing principles that a ‘company’s legal persona
cannot be ignored at the choosing of a party’. She
held that
‘the separate personality is “no mere technicality”.
It is foundational to company law.
A
party cannot simply disregard the ‘corporate veil’; it
must be permitted by law to do so.’ These principles
are
apposite in the present context as well – they reinforce my
view that Hollard cannot,
without more
,
plant itself into the main action as plaintiff and, effectively,
supplant Le Bonheur. Hollard must follow the rules of court.
[65]
The something ‘more’ envisaged in the preceding paragraph
entails Hollard making
use of the relevant court procedure to join
issue with the defendant. By virtue of the doctrine of subrogation,
Hollard has an
interest in the outcome of the main action. If it
wishes to protect that interest
as a litigant with procedural
rights
, it must formally become a ‘party’ in its own
name pursuant to, for e.g., rule 10 (joinder of parties and causes of
action), or rule 12 (intervention as plaintiff). What Hollard may not
do is to litigate in the shadows and then, when things go
awry,
emerge and stand in the light, then proclaim itself to be the ‘true
plaintiff’ with procedural rights under the
rules of court.
Those rights are reserved for a ‘party’ properly before
court who is joined in the pleadings as a litigant
(i.e, ‘party’).
Hollard is not a ‘party’ as statutorily defined.
[66]
Our law permits insurers (and other well-resourced third parties), to
fund litigation for the
benefit of a litigating party. The phenomenon
of funded litigation is increasing. Often, funders control the levers
of litigation.
What is not allowed under our court rules is for an
insurer (or other third-party funder) who litigates in the name of
someone
else to assert that he/she/it is the true ‘party’
before court and is entitled to the suite of procedural rights
reserved
for litigants cited in the pleadings. The fact that an
insurer (or other third party) is funding the litigation; and/or is
allowed
to select the lawyers appointed to deal with the case; and/or
has a financial interest in the successful prosecution of the
litigation
(whether due to subrogation or on some other basis), is of
no moment under our court rules. Hollard seeks to ignore all this.
[67]
On its own version, Hollard has been litigating anonymously in this
Court. When consideration
is given to the contents of rules 10, 12,
15, 17, and 18, it becomes evident that the Uniform Rules do not
permit anyone to litigate
anonymously. Put differently, a ‘party’
(as defined) is a litigant described in the pleadings and who
litigates openly
and transparently before a court. Litigating in the
long shadow of another is antithetical to our constitutional values
which must
infuse litigation. This is underscored in
Arendsnes
Sweefspoor CC v Botha
2013 (5) SA 399
(SCA) para 19 as follows:
‘
With
the advent of the constitutional dispensation, it has become a
constitutional imperative to view the object of the rule as
ensuring
a fair trial or hearing. … And rules are provided to
secure the inexpensive and expeditious completion of
litigation and
are devised to further the administration of justice …
Considerations of justice and fairness are of prime
importance in the
interpretation of procedural rules.’ (Authorities omitted)
[68]
Our courts permit insurers to pursue subrogated claims in an
insured’s name as if they
were the insured, despite this being
described as ‘a less than desirable practice’ and fraught
with ‘anomalies’.
See
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra
paras 23 - 24. This does not imply that insurers have a license to
sue anonymously. Doing so is contrary to the spirit and,
as discussed
above, the letter of our court rules. Mr Lamplough submitted that
Goodwin Stable Trust v Duohex (Pty) Ltd
1998 (4) SA 606
(C)
and
Smith v Banjo
2011 (2) SA 518
(KZP) are authority for the
proposition that Hollard can litigate anonymously. He argued that
these cases affirm that there is
no duty on Hollard to disclose the
fact of subrogation. For the ensuing reasons, I disagree.
[69]
Goodwin Stable Trust
supra serves as clear authority that
insurers who litigate in an insured’s name without disclosing
the existence of subrogation
imperils the integrity of the lawsuit.
The consequences of non-disclosure, with which I align myself, was
explained by Selikowitz
J as follows, albeit in the context of
arbitration (at 624):
‘
Litigation in
the name of another without disclosure of that fact whether it arises
by agency or otherwise raises the spectre of
champerty
.
… Natural justice and in particular the idea of fairness
requires that such a party should know precisely against whom
the
arbitration is being conducted.
Many
decisions in regard to both litigation
and arbitration, including whether to proceed or not as also whether
to compromise and settle
are
made in the light of the identity of the opposing parties and their
relationships to one another
.
Their existing and possible future relationships through
circumstances such as a continuing or potential business relationship
are just some of the factors which may influence their actions.
The
known ability of an opposing party to perform in terms of an award is
also a factor which determines the conduct of proceedings, which
in turn involves the expenditure of moneys.
’
(Emphasis added)
[70]
Contrary to Mr Lamplough’s contention,
Smith v Banjo
supra also does not assist Hollard. In that case, Patel DJP (et Nkosi
AJ concurring) held:
‘
The involvement of
the insurer in a lawsuit is irrelevant and therefore it is not
necessary to plead such involvement. …
I agree with the
plaintiff’s submission that from a practical perspective the
insurer’s involvement in the suit is
irrelevant. For this
reason it is clearly not necessary for the plaintiff to plead the
insurer’s involvement in the suit.’
(para 12)
[71]
In this extract, Patel DJP merely states that ‘the involvement’
of an insurer in
a lawsuit need not be pleaded. In the context of the
extract read as a whole, the court held that it is not necessary to
plead
the practical aspects of an insurer funded lawsuit, (such as,
the fact that an insurer pays the legal costs; or that the insurer
has appointed an attorney). This decision does not imply that
disclosures of the kind envisaged in
Goodwin Stable Trust
supra at 624 and in
Nkosi v Mbatha
(AR20/10) [2010] ZAKZPHC 38
(6 July 2010) para 18 (see below in paragraph [75]) ‘is
irrelevant’. Moreover, disclosure
promotes adherence to
constitutional
grundnorms
(basic norms) during judicial
proceedings involving the recovery of subrogated insurance claims.
[72]
Patel DJP’s quoted statement at para 12 is,
at best, obiter. This is because the dispute in the appeal
was
resolved without the court needing to engage the issue of
subrogation. This is clear from the following extract:
‘
It is in my view
unnecessary to consider the question as to whether or not the present
matter involves a subrogated claim. Subrogation
is at best a
collateral fact which is not capable of affording any reasonable
presumption or inference as to the principal matter
in dispute.’
(para 10)
[73]
To the extent that Patel DJP’s statement in para 12 aligns with
Mr Lamplough’s contention,
which I do not consider to be the
position, then I am constrained not to follow it. I consider it to be
incorrect. The contrary
view articulated in
Goodwin Stable
Trust
supra and
Nkosi v Mbatha
supra is, in my view, the
correct one. To the extent that the latter judgment holds (at para
18) that subrogation must be
proved
when an insurer sues in an
insured’s name, I express no view thereon (this is a matter for
the trial court to decide). I
merely hold that when insurers pursue
subrogated claims in an insured’s name as permitted by law,
then disclosure of facts
of the kind envisaged above in paragraphs
[22] and [24] ought to appear in the pleadings of the party suing.
[74]
In my view, there is no justification in logic or law for exempting
an insured and an insurer
from the obligation to disclose the fact of
indemnification and the presence of a subrogated insurance claim.
Meanwhile, victims
of motor vehicle accidents who pursue claims
against the Road Accident Fund (RAF) are obliged to disclose to the
RAF, during the
litigation process, the fact that a medical insurance
scheme indemnified the claimant for past medical expenses, which
monies are
sought to be recovered from the RAF for reimbursement to
the insurer. See
Discovery
Health (Pty) Ltd v RAF and
Another
2025 (3) SA 225
(GP). The promotion of equality among
litigants suing for damages to reimburse insurers favour the
imposition of a similar duty
on an indemnified insured and its
insurer to disclose the existence of subrogation.
[75]
Public policy also favours disclosure. Non-disclosure encourages a
practice that promotes unfairness
through secrecy in litigation,
rather than frankness and transparency. To protect the integrity of
an action proceeding requires
that the pertinent facts identified
above be disclosed. By courts not obliging disclosure gives judicial
cover to litigants seeking
to conceal the subrogation and avert
potential defences to a claim based on subrogation. As was submitted
by Mr Seale, defences
may include the incurrence of double
compensation to an insured owing to a prior liquidation or
de-registration of an insurer.
The dangers inherent in courts not
obliging disclosure was exposed by Madondo J (et Mnguni J concurring)
in
Nkosi v Mbatha
supra para 18:
‘
In
the
request for further particulars the plaintiff was specifically asked
whether her motor vehicle was at the time of the collision
insured,
and whether she had personally paid for the repairs. The plaintiff
refused to answer the questions posed to her on the
ground that the
information requested was not required for pleading.
In
my view, the plaintiff had thereby misled the defendant as to the
time and correct state of events and as to the nature of her
claim.
’
(Emphasis
added)
[76]
The SCA, in
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra para 19, discussed
English law which compels insurers with subrogated claims to sue in
an insured’s name. The SCA held
that ‘[t]his requirement
gives rise to a number of procedural anomalies’. The SCA then
posed the question whether this
requirement ‘is consonant with
our constitutional values and our law of procedure’ (para 23).
It answered ‘no’
for the following reasons:
‘
To require a
party to litigate in the name of another appears to me to fly in the
face of the requirement of transparency that underlies
all
litigation.
The rule serves no public interest in modern times, as appears from
the position in the USA. It is formalistic and creates anomalies.
It
enables the insurer to litigate in the name of the insured without
taking any risks as far as litigation costs are concerned. The
supposed advantage, namely that the insurance company may be able to
retain its anonymity, is clearly not to the advantage
of the
wrongdoer and also probably not to that of the insured.
’
(Authorities omitted) (Emphasis added)
[77]
Harms ADP held that the practice of suing in an insured’s name
is ‘less than desirable’
(para 24) – it is
inconsistent with our normative value system. However, he held that
this long-standing practice ought not
be abolished by judicial fiat.
This decision was taken in the interests of promoting legal
certainty, a basic tenet of the rule
of law entrenched as a
foundational value in s 1(
c
) of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the Constitution). Harms ADP wrote:
‘
This court is
reluctant to interfere with settled legal principles even when they
have their origin in an incorrect interpretation
of the law because
members of the public may have arranged their affairs on the
assumption that they were settled.’ (para
24)
[78]
The kernel of the SCA’s decision on the procedural issue is
encapsulated in the following
extract:
‘
Consequently,
t
his
judgment does not hold that the insurer must litigate in its own name
and may not litigate in the name of the insured. What
it does hold is
that the English rule in its stark form cannot be justified and that,
unless the wrongdoer will be prejudiced in
a procedural sense, courts
may permit the insurer to proceed in its own name. It might be
necessary to adapt other procedural rules
in such an event as
requiring, by analogy with Uniform rule 35(5)(b), discovery by the
insured.’ (para 24)
[79]
Accordingly,
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra adopts the
position in American and Continental law, namely, that an insurer can
sue in its own name for recovery of monies
under a subrogated claim.
This is geared ‘to avoid confusion over the identity of the
real plaintiff’ (para 19). However,
unlike other legal systems,
ours provides an insurer with an election: it can choose to sue in
its own name; or it can litigate
through the persona (i.e., identity)
of its insured. In cases where the latter option is selected, the
indemnified insured exists
as a legal person with its own legal
personality. That juridical fact cannot be ignored. In the lawsuit
which is instituted, the
insured (not the insurer) is the real
plaintiff suing for judgment (as is the position of Le Bonheur and
countless other insured
whose identities are used in insurance
related litigation).
[80]
Mr Lamplough argued that the two options have the same effect in law.
I find that logic dictates
that when the SCA held that insurers may
choose between different procedures to pursue the same subrogated
claim, it must have
envisaged that the legal consequences for each
procedural regime would differ. If not, then why have two processes?
For all these
reasons (as amplified under the next heading), I find
that when Hollard elected to litigate in Le Bonheur’s name, the
former
did not supplant the latter as litigant. Therefore, Le
Bonheur’s procedural rights did not vest in Hollard.
[81]
My conclusion that Hollard did not become a ‘party’ in
the main action is buttressed
by the decision in
Cloete
v Van Zyl
supra.
This case involved Hollard. Van Zyl was sued for R1 398 132.00
in damages suffered by Cloete’s property in
a fire allegedly
caused by Van Zyl. After Hollard repudiated Cloete’s claim, the
latter sued Van Zyl. It was common cause
that Hollard appointed an
attorney, Mr Buchner, to defend Van Zyl and that Hollard paid his
fees by virtue of the principle of
subrogation.
[1]
[82]
Van Zyl, duly represented by Mr Buchner, concluded a settlement with
Cloete on the merits
(i.e., as to liability for the fire).
Before receiving Hollard’s response, Mr Buchner
informed Cloete’s
attorney that Van Zyl accepted the settlement
terms. Problems emerged when Hollard rejected the settlement.
[83]
When Hollard’s refusal to agree to the settlement became known
to Van Zyl, he sought to
revoke the settlement. He realised that he
would be personally liable for the quantum of damages, as he conceded
the merits of
Cloete’s claim. Cloete refused to accept Van
Zyl’s purported cancellation of the settlement. Cloete then
applied to
court for an order confirming the settlement on the issue
of merits. Cloete prevailed.
[84]
In the course of upholding the validity of the settlement and making
it an order of court binding
on Van Zyl (not Hollard), the high court
held that ‘
Hollard Insurance is not a party
to the proceedings, therefore, whether it later denied liability or
repudiated the defendant’s
claim is irrelevant’ (para
28). This was held to be the position, despite the application of the
principle of subrogation
in that case. The high court held further
that Mr Buchner, who was appointed by Hollard, was duly authorized to
act for Van Zyl
in the litigation. This was based on the fact that
Hollard was not a party to the litigation, despite Hollard paying the
legal
fees. The high court also held that when Mr Buchner
communicated to Cloete’s attorney that settlement had been
reached with
Van Zyl, Mr Buchner was duly authorized to act for Van
Zyl and to bind him to the terms of settlement. For this reason,
Hollard
was free to reject settlement.
[85]
The guiding principles emerging from
Cloete v Van Zyl
supra
affirm that the conclusions I reached are consistent with a proper
interpretation of the relevant Uniform Rules and their
application to
the facts before me. A final hook used by Hollard to hang its
challenge to the substitution notice filed by Werksmans
is its
contention that Le Bonheur cannot terminate Clyde & Co’s
mandate because Hollard appointed the law firm in the
exercise of its
common law rights under the principle of subrogation.
[86]
As will become evident from my discussion under the next heading, the
principle of subrogation
does not involve the transfer from, or
surrender by, an insured to an insurer of the right to select and
appoint an attorney who
will conduct the litigation on behalf of the
insured. That right remains vested with the insured in whose name the
litigation is
conducted. This legal position is accepted by Hollard
in its standard terms and conditions of insurance. In accordance with
Rand Mutual Assurance Co Ltd
supra para 18, clause 9 of the
insurance policy deals with subrogation. The source of Hollard’s
entitlement to participate
in the selection and appointment of an
attorney for the recovery of monies under its subrogated claim is
found in clause 9(b) quoted
above in paragraph [28].
[87]
In terms of clause 9(b), Le Bonheur is obliged to, ‘at the
expense of the Company [i.e.,
Hollard], do and permit to be done all
such things as may be necessary or reasonably required by the Company
for the purpose of
enforcing any rights to which the Company shall
be, or would become, subrogated upon indemnification of the Insured’.
It
goes without saying that this includes the appointment of an
attorney.
[88]
Consequently, Clyde & Co’s appointment occurred with Le
Bonheur’s consent, whether
expressly or impliedly by conduct.
That consent was necessary in law. By virtue of rule 7 (discussed
earlier in this judgment),
without Le Bonheur’s consent as
plaintiff, Clyde & Co could not lawfully institute the main
action against the defendant.
[89]
In these circumstances, owing to Clyde & Co’s refusal to
carry out the instructions
of Le Bonheur’s directors, they
acted lawfully by revoking Clyde & Co’s authority to
continue to act as agent on
behalf of Le Bonheur in the main action
conducted in its name. Indeed, I find that, owing to Clyde & Co’s
conflicted
position by reason that it was serving two masters (or
principals) whose interests were no longer aligned, it was prudent
for Le
Bonheur’s directors to terminate Clyde & Co’s
mandate when they did. The situation was simply untenable.
[90]
For all these reasons, I conclude that the substitution notice
delivered by Werksmans is valid
and legally effective for all
purposes arising under rule 16(2).
Issue
3: Does subrogation vest Hollard with Le Bonheur’s rights?
[91]
I now deal with an alternative argument advanced by Mr Lamplough. He
argued that even if Hollard
is not a ‘party’ in the
technical sense defined in the rules of court (as I held above), then
that is not dispositive
of the dispute. He argued that Hollard’s
position as the de facto and de jure plaintiff also arises from the
common law of
subrogation. He argued that once Hollard compensated Le
Bonheur the R12,6m, Hollard stepped into the insured’s shoes
for
all purposes in law as regards the subrogated claim. He argues
that this implies the following: (i) At common law, Hollard does
not
have a claim against Le Bonheur but rather a claim against the
wrongdoer. Le Bonheur’s substantive right to be compensated
is
transferred, ex lege, to Hollard; (ii) At common law, this leads to
all procedural rights to enforce the substantive right being
vested
in Hollard (
not Le Bonheur
); and (iii) The procedural rights
include: (a) to appoint and to remove an attorney; and (b) to issue
summons in Hollard’s
own name or in Le Bonheur’s name (as
recognised in
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra).
[92]
Flowing from this argument, I enquired of Mr. Lamplough regarding his
perspective on Le Bonheur’s
legal status in the main action
where it is described as the ‘plaintiff’? His response
was straightforward (yet drastic):
He said that, in law, by reason
that Le Bonheur was fully indemnified by Hollard, all Le Bonheur’s
erstwhile procedural rights
vest in Hollard. Therefore, so his
argument went, Le Bonheur has no rights of such a nature vested in it
any longer. The use of
its name in the main action is, so it was
argued, a right enjoyed by Hollard by virtue of the decision in
Rand
Mutual Assurance Co
supra. Mr Seale described these propositions
as ‘absurd’. He submitted that this argument would, if
endorsed, lead
to several anomalies. I agree.
[93]
When properly understood, Mr Lamplough’s argument creates
‘anomalies’ of the
kind envisioned by Harms ADP in
Rand
Mutual Assurance Co
supra para 23. See above in paragraph [76].
Anomalies are to be averted. It cannot be that our common law of
subrogation relegates
Le Bonheur (and other similarly positioned
indemnified insured whose identities are used in litigation) to being
a litigant in
name only. Le Bonheur cannot hold mere spectator status
in a lawsuit conducted in its name and through its legal identity
with
all the associated litigation risks (such as, exposure to an
adverse cost order), but in which action Le Bonheur is helpless as
a
non-paying spectator imbued with no procedural rights as all these
rights vest in Hollard. In my view, this is untenable as a
matter of
law - it breeds unfairness and fosters injustice during litigation.
[94]
Mr Lamplough’s proposition referred to above in paragraph [92]
erodes to nothingness the
procedural rights of Le Bonheur as a
plaintiff ‘party’ under the rules of court. Such a result
cannot be countenanced
because it is incongruous with the spirit and
objects of the Uniform Rules which is, in turn, underpinned and
informed by the contents
of s 34 in the Constitution.
[2]
See
Social
Justice Coalition
supra
paras 48 - 52.
[95]
Le Bonheur asserts its procedural rights as a litigant in the main
action. Le Bonheur calls on
this Court to safeguard its position as a
plaintiff (and, in effect, protect the position of all similarly
placed indemnified insured
whose identities are used daily in civil
litigation for the recovery of subrogated insurance claims). For the
reasons given above
and amplified further below, I find that the
arguments advanced for Hollard’s benefit as regards the
transfer of all procedural
rights from Le Bonheur as the indemnified
insured to Hollard when subrogation occurs, is unsustainable in law.
[96]
If our common law of subrogation has the effect of rendering hollow
an insured’s procedural
rights in litigation, as envisioned by
Mr Lamplough’s argument, then that position was changed through
legislation in the
form of the rules of court. On the basis outlined
above in paragraph [44], the Uniform Rules constitute subordinate
legislation
with statutory force. As legislation, they can alter the
common law.
[97]
The rules of court confer procedural rights. See
Social
Justice Coalition
supra para 55. For the reasons outlined in
this judgment pertaining to issue no. 2, Le Bonheur qualifies as a
‘party’
within the meaning of that term in rule 16 and
the Uniform Rules read as a whole. If the common law of subrogation
took away the
procedural litigation rights enjoyed by Le Bonheur as
an indemnified insured in whose name and identity a civil litigation
claim
is pursued, then those procedural rights were restored by the
Uniform Rules. It amended the common law position (assuming, for
present purposes, that the position sketched by Mr Lamplough indeed
prevails at common law). The amended position contemplated here
would
apply from the moment that the summons in the main action was issued
and Le Bonheur became a plaintiff ‘party’
therein.
[98]
The rights-based interpretation of the rules of court advanced here
aligns with the value-based
interpretive methodology which this Court
is enjoined to promote by virtue of s 39(2) of the Constitution.
[3]
See
Social
Justice Coalition
supra paras 65, 85. The
Uniform Rules qualify as ‘legislation’ within its
context. All rules of court are enactments
having the force of law.
Therefore, the court rules qualify as ‘law’ within the
definition of this term in the Interpretation
Act.
[4]
[99]
To sum up
: The preceding discussion shows that, on a proper
understanding of our prevailing jurisprudence, there is no transfer
of rights
at common law of the nature advocated for the benefit of
Hollard. This raises the next sub-question arising for adjudication
in
this matter: what is the nature and extent of the rights of an
insurer (such as, Hollard) who has fully indemnified an insured (such
as, Le Bonheur)? I will now address this legal issue, but only to the
extent necessary for present purposes.
[100]
As a starting point, it bears stating that there is a conceptual
issue which appears to bedevil the subject of
subrogation in
insurance law. Mr de Beer points out that the notion of an insurer
stepping into an insured’s shoes as creditor
is, as Mr
Lamplough’s arguments show, mistakenly understood in a literal
sense rather than in its intended metaphorical sense.
I agree. The
following extract in Joubert (ed)
The Law of South Africa
vol
12 (first re-issue) para 373 (quoted with approval in
Rand Mutual
Assurance Co
supra para 12) shows clearly that subrogation in the
context of insurance was never intended to imply a substitution of
the insured
by the insurer:
‘
In its literal
sense, the word “subrogation” means the substitution of
one party for another as creditor.
In
the context of insurance, however, the word is used in a metaphorical
sense.
Subrogation as a doctrine of insurance law embraces a set of rules
providing for the reimbursement of an insurer which has indemnified
its insured under a contract of indemnity insurance.
The
gist of the doctrine is the insurer’s personal right of
recourse against its insured, in terms of which it is entitled
to
reimburse itself out of the proceeds of any claims that the insured
may have against third parties in respect of the loss.
’
(Emphasis added)
[101]
This locus classicus statement reveals that, under the subrogation
doctrine, a ‘personal right’ is
acquired by an insurer
against an indemnified insured for a reimbursement ‘out of the
proceeds of any claims that the insured
may have against third
parties in respect of the loss’
.
In other words, when
subrogation applies, an insurer’s claim lies against an
indemnified insured who, in turn, has a claim
against the third-party
wrongdoer for compensation in respect of any damages caused. This
probably explains, at least in part,
why, in practice, insurers
assume the insured’s identity and then sue the wrongdoer in the
insured’s name.
[102]
Our case law makes it clear that subrogation does not bring about a
transfer of substantive or procedural rights
from an insured to an
insurer resulting in an insurer substituting an insured as creditor.
I list a few illustrative examples only.
The following was stated in
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra para 9:
‘
I accordingly
agree with the respondent’s counsel who argued that … a
mutual association is nothing other than an insurer;
and that once
the mutual association has indemnified the employer by paying
compensation in full to the employee,
the
association may exercise the right of recourse against a third party
by either obtaining a cession from the employer or by bringing
a
subrogated claim for recovery
under s 36(1)(b).’ (Emphasis added)
[103]
In
Goodwin Stable Trust
supra at 623, Selikowitz J referred to
Joubert (ed)
LAWSA
vol 12 paras 222 - 226 as authority for his
conclusion that, as a matter of law, ‘[s]ubrogation does not
involve a cession
or a transfer of the insured's rights against the
third person’.
Smith v Banjo
supra is another example of
the point being made here. There, Patel DJP held that when an insurer
sues in an insured’s name,
then the parties to that suit,
namely, the insured and the third-party wrongdoer, ‘have the
same rights and duties as they
would have had had the matter not been
a subrogated claim’ (para 12). In other words, the rights and
duties of the litigants
remain unchanged by the subrogation. The
litigation continues between the parties as though subrogation did
not exist. This makes
sense owing to the fact that, as this judgment
holds, an insurer with a subrogated claim is not a ‘party’
to the action,
nor has any procedural rights under the court rules.
It is the insured who sues for judgment (not the insurer).
[104]
A further indicator of the absence of any transfer of rights from an
indemnified insured to an insurer appears
from
Nkosi v Mbatha
supra. In that case, Madondo J described the insured as a ‘trustee
for any compensation paid to him or her by the wrongdoer
and is bound
to hand over to the insurer whatever money he or she receives from
the wrongdoer’ (para 13). Madondo J
affirmed that when an
insurer sues in an insured’s name in relation to a subrogated
claim, it is the insured who, as plaintiff,
becomes the judgment
creditor if the claim succeeds. It is also the insured who, in
accordance with a court order, recovers the
judgment debt with costs
and ‘would be obliged to hand the recovered amount over to the
insurer’ (para 15).
[105]
All these considerations destroy the substratum of Hollard’s
case that, at common law, subrogation results
in a transfer of rights
(both substantive and procedural) from Le Bonheur to Hollard by
virtue that the latter indemnified the
former in fulfilment of its
obligations under an insurance contract. Thus, the issues
crystallised above in paragraph [16(c)] are
decided against Hollard
and in Le Bonheur’s favour.
Hollard
joined as co-plaintiff in its own name: subrogation as a cause of
action
[106]
My conclusions regarding issue nos. 1, 2, and 3 paves the way for
Werksmans to deliver the notice of withdrawal
intended by Le
Bonheur’s directors in their resolution quoted above in
paragraph [3].
[107]
A withdrawal of the main action would place Hollard in an invidious
position. It would have to commence a new
action against Stellenbosch
Vineyards and in its own name by reason that Le Bonheur revoked its
consent for a lawsuit in its name.
[I do not engage the question
whether Le Bonheur’s conduct constitutes a breach of the
insurance policy. That issue may yet
be a cause for further
litigation and may come before this Court at a future date.]
[108]
Litigation de novo would be time-consuming and at substantial
additional cost to Hollard (i.e., over and above
the costs it already
incurred to fund the main action). I agree with Mr Lamplough that
these considerations ought not to be overlooked
and that Hollard
ought to have an effective remedy in these circumstances. It is with
this in mind that I consider how the main
action ought to be
conducted further.
[109]
Fairness, although engrained into the rule of law, is, on its own, a
bedrock value which must infuse all forms
of dispute resolution
regulated by s 34 of the Constitution quote above in footnote 2. See
Lufuno Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
2009 (4) SA 529
(CC) paras 69 - 79. Section 34 encompasses a
right to bring a dispute to court, a right to have it litigated to
finality,
and a right to have it decided. See
Social Justice
Coalition
supra paras 60, 134 - 137. The rules of court set out
the forms and processes involved in giving practical expression to
these
rights in an efficient and expeditious way. See
Social
Justice Coalition
supra paras 57 - 58.
[110]
Fairness must permeate every facet of a judicial proceeding so that
fairness protects the parties involved and
those with an interest
therein, to the extent required by context. As already recorded
earlier, Hollard has an interest in the
outcome of the main action.
This is common cause. By allowing fairness to play an equitable role
in maintaining a healthy balance
between the various interests at
play in the main action, fairness promotes justice for all and
protects judicial integrity in
the administration of justice in the
main action for all affected parties and interested persons. This, in
turn, promotes the public’s
confidence in the judiciary which
is essential for its efficacy.
[111]
Hollard believed it instituted its subrogated claim via the main
action. That action was certified to be trial
ready. Withdrawal
thereof is imminent. Once effected, Hollard would not be able to
proceed to trial. It would have to institute
legal action afresh, a
costly result that would substantially and unreasonably delay
Hollard’s pursuit of its claim. All
this threatens with
infringement Hollard’s right of access to the court under s 34
of the Constitution. See
Social Justice Coalition
supra para
134.
[112]
In
Social Justice Coalition
supra para 137, it was held:
‘
By reason of the
fact that judicial officers preside over the courts to which they are
appointed, they bear the principal, but not
exclusive, duty to ensure
that the disputes that come before their courts are decided fairly,
in public hearings,
and
within a reasonable time
.
That duty is plainly owed to the judiciary, as an institution.
But
it is also owed to everyone who looks to the courts to secure justice
and enjoys the right of access to the courts that section 34
provides.
’
(Emphasis added)
[113]
Given the peculiar circumstances of this case, it is incumbent that I
‘“forge new tools” and
shape innovative remedies’
(
Fose v Minister of Safety and Security
[1997] ZACC 6
;
1997 (3) SA 786
(CC) para 69). When a constitutional right is infringed or at risk of
possible infringement, ‘it is for courts to craft effective,
just and equitable remedies’ (
Mwelase v Director-General,
Department of Rural Development and Land Reform
2019 (6) SA
597
(CC) para 69). A superior court can do so as part of its inherent
powers conferred in s 173 of the Constitution, namely, to regulate
its own processes.
[114]
In
S v Molaudzi
2015 (2) SACR 341
(CC) para 33, it
was held:
‘
This inherent
power to regulate process does not apply to substantive rights but
rather to adjectival or procedural rights. A court
may exercise
inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own process only when faced
with inadequate procedures and rules in the sense
that they do not
provide a mechanism to deal with a particular scenario.
A
court will, in appropriate cases, be entitled to fashion a remedy to
enable it to do justice between the parties.
’
(Emphasis added)
[115]
On this basis, I will grant an order that Hollard is joined as the
‘Second Plaintiff’ to the main
action. Le Bonheur will
forthwith be the ‘First Plaintiff’. Hollard will be
afforded an opportunity to use rule 28
for purposes of amending the
Combined Summons and the POC by adding the details of its
description. It may have to effect further
amendments to the POC as
may be contextually required including, but not necessarily limited
to, pleading subrogation and an appropriate
remedy. Pending these
amendments, Le Bonheur will be precluded from withdrawing the main
action.
[116]
In view of the anomalies alluded to in
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra para 23 and the risks associated with insurers suing in an
insured’s name (as this judgment illustrates), it remains
unclear as to why insurers approach their election as an ‘either
or’ choice: either sue in their own name or sue in
an insured’s
name. There are benefits to pursuing a subrogated claim as a joint
action. For e.g., it avoids (or substantially
reduces) the potential
‘anomalies’ alluded to in
Rand Mutual Assurance Co
supra para 23; both the insured and the insurer have procedural
rights; insurers may still control the litigation if its interests
align with that of the insured; and, if the claim succeeds, a court
order is issued in which an insurer is a judgment creditor
with
enforceable rights.
[117]
Despite the English law origins of the doctrine of subrogation, our
constitutional order impelled recognition
of an insurer’s right
to institute legal action in its own name for purposes of recovering
from a wrongdoer a sum which is
re-imbursive compensation arising
from the same factual circumstance(s) which led to the insurer
indemnifying its insured in the
first place under the terms of an
insurance contract.
[118]
In our constitutional era, the common law of subrogation was
developed by judicial fiat in
Rand
Mutual Assurance Co
supra
from the mould incorporated into our law of insurance in
pre-constitutional times. By recognising that insurers have a right
to sue in their own names, the SCA, by necessary implication,
recognised that a subrogated claim in the hands of an insurer gives
rise to a separate cause which can sustain an action. This is
affirmed, correctly so in my view, in
Nkosi
v Mbatha
supra.
The contrary view expressed by certain writers is misdirected.
[5]
[119]
When an insurer is joined as a co-plaintiff with an indemnified
insured, as I will direct in relation to the main
action, then, in my
view, an insurer ought to seek at least the following twin remedies:
(i) first, an order confirming the validity
of the insurer’s
subrogated claim; and (ii) secondly, an order which, flowing from the
case pleaded by the insured and/or
insurer as co-plaintiffs (as the
case may be), directing that a fixed sum (or such other sum as may be
determined by the trial
court) be paid to the insurer by the cited
defendant as a reimbursement pursuant to the insurer’s rights
under the terms
of subrogation agreed to with the insured
co-plaintiff.
[120]
The formulation of the relief envisaged in the preceding paragraph is
based, partly, on the requirements for a
valid claim predicated on
subrogation (see
Nkosi v Mbatha
supra para 16) and, partly, on
the underlying purpose of an insurer’s claim.
Costs
[121]
There is no reason why costs should not follow success. Le Bonheur
was successful in resisting Hollard’s
application. The joinder
of Hollard as a litigant does not detract from this fact. Counsel’s
fees will be granted on scale
C of the tariff.
[122]
In exercising my discretion on costs, I took into consideration the
factors listed in Uniform Rule 67A(2) and
(3)(
b
). Importantly,
Hollard appointed a silk to argue its application. This is an
indication that the issues involved had complexity
which warranted an
advanced level of knowledge and technical expertise of senior
practitioners. This is further borne out by the
contents of this
judgment.
Order
[123]
In the result, the following orders are made:
(a)
The application by Hollard is dismissed with costs, such costs for Le
Bonheur’s counsel shall be on tariff Scale C;
(b)
Hollard is, with immediate effect, joined as co-plaintiff to the main
action. Hollard will be the ‘Second Plaintiff’ and Le
Bonheur the ‘First Plaintiff’;
(c)
Hollard is granted 30 court days from date of this order to file a
notice
of intention to amend the Combined Summons and the Particulars
of Claim in all necessary respects; and
(d)
Prior to the lapse of the 30-day period referred to in (c) above and
pending
the effecting of the amendments envisaged in (c) if notice
thereof is given, the main action in this matter may not be withdrawn
by La Bonheur or anyone else acting on its behalf, nor may the
defendant’s dismissal application or the trial in the main
action be enrolled for hearing.
FAREED
MOOSA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
Plaintiff:
M
de Beer
Instructed by:
Werksmans Attorneys
For
Hollard:
A
J Lamplough SC
Instructed
by:
Clyde & Co Inc Attorneys
For
Defendant:
M
Seale SC and A Walters
Instructed
by:
Mellows & De Swardt Inc Attorneys
For
First & Second
Third
Party:
Mr Tyler
Instructed
by:
Dicks van der Merwe Attorneys
[1]
Cloete
v Van Zyl
supra
para 19.
[2]
Section 34 of
the Constitution reads: ‘Everyone has the right to
have any
dispute that can be
resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before a court
or, where appropriate,
another independent and
impartial tribunal or forum.’
[3]
Section
39(2) of the Constitution reads: ‘
When
interpreting any legislation, and when developing the common law or
customary law, every court, tribunal or forum must promote
the
spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights.’
[4]
Section
2 of the Interpretation Act defines ‘law’ to mean ‘
any
law, proclamation, ordinance, Act of Parliament or other enactment
having the force of law’.
[5]
See, for
e.g., A Smith ‘Does subrogation constitute a new cause
of
action to be pleaded?’ 2021 (May ed)
De
Rebus
18.
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