Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 239South Africa
Discovery Life Limited v Munro (A 152 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 239 (25 November 2022)
Headnotes
at Mossel Bay on the 5th May 2021. The appellant is a registered long-term insurer, and the respondent was contracted to it as an independent contractor. The magistrate dismissed the appellant’s claims against the respondent and, in turn, upheld the respondent’s counterclaims against the appellant. It is against these orders that
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Discovery Life Limited v Munro (A 152 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 239 (25 November 2022)
Discovery Life Limited v Munro (A 152 / 2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 239 (25 November 2022)
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sino date 25 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: A 152 / 2021
In
the matter between:
DISCOVERY
LIFE LIMITED
Appellant
and
ANDRIES
MUNRO
Respondent
Coram:
Saldanha
et
Wille
, JJ
Heard:
18
th
of November 2022
Delivered:
25
th
of November 2022
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
#
WILLE,
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is a civil appeal against the whole of the judgment and order of
the Honourable Magistrate,
Mr G Hattingh, in the Magistrates Court
held at Mossel Bay on the 5th May 2021. The appellant is a registered
long-term insurer,
and the respondent was contracted to it as an
independent contractor. The magistrate dismissed the appellant’s
claims against
the respondent and, in turn, upheld the respondent’s
counterclaims against the appellant. It is against these orders that
the appellant appeals. The appellant`s claims relate to certain
pre-paid commissions in the amount of R11565,97 paid to the
respondent
in respect of contractual “claw-back”
provisions and the reimbursement of an upfront cash payment in the
amount of
R215631,00 (described as a “neutralisation”
payment) made to the respondent. The appellant also claimed
mora
interest on each amount at the rate of nine (9) per cent per annum
and costs on an attorney and client scale.
Appeal
grounds
[2]
The appellant had noted sixteen (16) grounds of appeal, the core of
which were the following,
namely; (a) that the appellant had a valid
contractual basis for the termination of its agreements with the
respondent; (b) that
the finding by the magistrate that the appellant
had prematurely terminated its “Independent Contractor”
agreement
with the respondent was wrong; (c) that the finding by the
magistrate that the appellant’s cancellation of the “Acceptance
of Offer” agreement was unlawful was wrong; and, (d) that the
respondent failed to make out a case in connection with both
the
merits and quantum of his two claims in-reconvention.
Overview
[3]
The
respondent entered into two discrete written agreements with the
appellant. The first agreement is styled the Independent Contractor
Agreement
[1]
, and the second has
the label of an Acceptance of Offer Agreement.
[2]
The first agreement mainly regulated the independent contractor
relationship between the appellant and the respondent. The second
agreement is essentially an incentive agreement which provides for an
upfront cash payment to the respondent and the allocation
of a
certain amount of shares to him by the appellant.
[4]
The share allocation to the respondent is also referenced in the
independent contractor
agreement as part of the appellant`s “Phantom
Share Scheme”. The payment in the incentive agreement was
inextricably
linked to a threshold referred to as the “minimum
average annual production” over a three (3) year period, which
is
set out in the form of a formula that measured the respondent's
“production-sales.” This production threshold is
different
to that required to be attained on an annual basis by an
independent contractor in terms of that agreement.
Termination
[5]
The appellant purportedly terminated the independent contractor
agreement on the 23
rd
of February, 2015. This was by way
of a letter of the same date. The purported termination was with
immediate effect. The reason
for the cancellation was that the
respondent was allegedly engaged in legal proceedings with the
Financial Services Board and would
not have been able to discharge
his obligations in terms of the independent contractor agreement. The
termination letter referenced
the independent contractor agreement in
terms, but also referred to certain terms of the incentive agreement.
[6]
By way of illustration, the letter of termination, in addition,
referred to the upfront
cash payment made to the respondent in terms
of the incentive agreement. The letter of termination records,
amongst other things,
the following;
‘…
You
have informed us that you are engaged in legal proceedings with the
Financial Services Board and will not be able to discharge
your
obligations in terms of the Agreement, thus constituting a material
breach thereof…’
[7]
The termination letter also referred to certain clauses in the
incentive agreement. Further,
it alleged breaches of the minimum
threshold average sales-production obligations and the alleged breach
of the stipulated period
for the incentive agreement. Clause 13 of
the independent contractor agreement indicates in terms the
following:
‘…
This
agreement may be terminated in the following circumstances, amongst
others;
“…
13.3
Where either party provides the other with one calendar month’s
written notice of termination…”
[8]
The termination letter relied squarely on clause 13.3 of the
independent contractor agreement.
The termination letter recorded the
following terms in connection with the termination of the independent
contractor agreement,
namely:
‘…
Clause
13.3 provides that the Agreement may be immediately terminated where
the Financial Consultant has breached a material term
of the
agreement…’
and
‘…
The
agreement is hereby terminated in reliance on clause 13.3 we hereby
notify you of an immediate termination of the agreement…’
Pleadings
[9]
The appellant, in its particulars of claim, relied on the terms of
the termination letter
for the immediate cancellation of the
independent contractor agreement in respect of its claim for the
repayment of the pre-paid
commissions and the repayment of the
upfront cash amount in terms of the incentive agreement. The
appellant also relied on the
termination letter aimed at the
independent contractor agreement for its cause of action against the
respondent for the repayment
of the amounts advanced to the
respondent under the incentive agreement.
[10]
The respondent, in his plea, squarely placed in issue the appellant's
unlawful cancellation of these agreements.
In the counter-claim, the
respondent pleaded the unlawful cancellation of the agreements and
set out his monetary claims against
the appellant in the form of; (a)
the lost commissions he would have earned to the end of his remaining
three (3) year period,
but for the unlawful termination of the
independent contractor agreement and; (b) the value of his aliquot
shareholding with the
appellant as at the date of the unlawful
cancellation of the agreements.
Consideration
[11]
The appellant conceded that the cancellation of the agreements with
the respondent was unlawful. The appellant
needed to give the
respondent the requisite months’ notice as stipulated in the
independent contractor agreement. As a result,
counsel for the
appellant attempted in vain to rely on some of the other averments
advanced in the termination letter. These references
found no
application, and his submissions in this regard were to no avail.
[12]
One
of the antecedent prerequisites for the lawful cancellation of an
agreement with a cancellation clause is that provisions such
as prior
notice must be complied with before a valid termination can be
established.
[3]
In this matter,
prior notice of one calendar months’ notice was such a
prerequisite.
[13]
In
addition, the right to terminate a contract unilaterally in the
absence of a breach depends on the terms of the contract
[4]
.
This right also depends on the nature and other terms of the
contract
[5]
. The agreements
concluded with the respondent may very well have contained such
clauses in the independent contractor agreement
considering the
nature of the relationship between the appellant and the respondent.
However, no primary facts were alleged in
the particulars of claim in
this connection and none of these clauses were relied upon by the
appellant. Besides, none found application
in the trial in the court
a
quo.
[14]
Moreover,
whether the cancellation of one agreement that is linked to another
agreement necessarily leads to the cancellation of
the linked
agreement also depends on the terms of the agreements. So too, a
contractual claim may survive cancellation of an agreement
if, before
cancellation, the claim had accrued and was due and enforceable as a
cause of action independent of any executory part
of the
agreement.
[6]
[15]
More
significantly, the respondent relied on the unlawful cancellation by
the appellant of the agreements and positively pleaded
facts that
demonstrated that the appellant had breached the agreements. This,
however, did not absolve the appellant from proving
the “lawful”
cancellation of the agreements where the appellant’s entire
claim was premised on the unlawfulness
of the respondent’s
actions.
[7]
[16]
The
respondent’s obligation to perform in terms of the agreements
was accordingly euthanised through no fault of the respondent,
but
due rather to the unlawful cancellation of the agreements by the
appellant. Thus, the respondent’s obligations were
extinguished, especially where the terms of the independent
contractor agreement did not stipulate that the respondent bore the
risk of this non-performance
[8]
.
The impossibility of performance by the respondent (in allegedly not
meeting the average production-sales threshold over the period
of
three (3) years as stipulated in the incentive agreement) and as
determined by the appellant itself ,was not at the instance
of the
respondent.
[17]
In as much as the respondent bore an onus in this connection, it was
squarely discharged by his evidence
in the court
a quo
. He
testified that he was removed without lawful notice from the
appellant's system and licensing as an independent contractor.
He
was, therefore, not able to contact his clients that had defaulted.
He was hamstrung and unable to mitigate his future losses
due to the
unlawful cancellation of the agreements by the appellant.
[18]
Finally, the appellant conceded that as far as the respondent’s
counter-claim based on his loss of
earnings due to the unlawful
cancellation of the independent contractor agreement was concerned,
the respondent had at the trial
in the court
a quo,
tendered
sufficiently good evidence and provided the “best evidence”
in the circumstances in respect of his loss of
earnings.
[19]
The quantum of the remaining counter-claim by the respondent was
determined concerning his aliquot shareholding
at the time of the
unlawful cancellation of the agreements with him. He calculated this
portion of the counter-claim on the share
price of his aliquot
shareholding at the initial date of the allocation to him. This was
without any escalation or growth thereon.
He claimed he did this to
keep this portion of his counter-claim below the monetary threshold
of claims allowed in the magistrates'
court. This counter-claim was
similarly adequately proved on a balance of probabilities by the
respondent in the court
a quo.
Costs
[20]
The respondent was legally represented in the court
a quo
,
and the costs order in this connection remains intact. As far as the
costs of appeal are concerned, the respondent appeared in
person.
Accordingly, the respondent is entitled to his reasonable
disbursements, including the cost of his reasonable travelling
and
accommodation expenses, to attend the appeal hearing in Cape Town.
Order
[21]
In the result, I would propose an order in the following terms:
1.
The appeal is dismissed, and the court's orders
a quo
are
confirmed.
2.
The respondent is entitled to recover from the appellant his
reasonable disbursements
and the costs of his reasonable travelling
and accommodation expenses of and incidental to the appeal.
WILLE,
J
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
SALDANHA,
J
[1]
For
ease of reference, I shall refer to this agreement as the
“
independent
contractor”
agreement.
[2]
For
ease of reference, I shall refer to this agreement as the
“
incentive”
agreement.
[3]
De
Wet NO v Uys NO
1998
(4) SA 694
(T) 706.
[4]
Van
Streepen & Gems (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration
1987
(4) SA 569 (A).
[5]
Cell
C (Pty) Ltd v Zulu
2008
(1) SA 541 (SCA).
[6]
Crest
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Rycklof Beleggings (Edms) Bpk
1972
(2) SA 863 (A).
[7]
Mobil
Oil Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mechin
1965
(2) SA 706 (A) 712.
[8]
Kudu
Granite Operations (Pty) Ltd v Caterna Ltd
2003
(5) SA 193
(SCA).
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