Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 21South Africa
Momentum Insure Company Limited v Chetty (D151/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 21 (17 April 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Momentum Insure Company Limited v Chetty (D151/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 21 (17 April 2025)
Momentum Insure Company Limited v Chetty (D151/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 21 (17 April 2025)
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sino date 17 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D151/2023
In
the matter between:
MOMENTUM
INSURE COMPANY LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
VENUGOPAL
KUPPAN CHETTY
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
P
WALLIS AJ
[1]
On 24 November 2021 at approximately 23h30 on the M4 northbound and,
at or about the
Broadway offramp, a Porsche GT3 was involved in a
single vehicle accident. The vehicle was at the time being driven by
Mr Venugopal
Chetty ("the plaintiff') (who was also the
registered owner). At the time of the accident the vehicle was
insured with the
applicant.
[2]
The applicant rejected the claim
inter alia
on the basis of a
download of the vehicle's telemetry system which was interpreted as
recording speeds prior to the accident of
171, 162, 149, 156 and
finally 164 kilometres per hour. In contrast the Plaintiff contended
that he was travelling at or under
the speed limit, which was agreed
to be 100 kilometres per hour.
[3]
The rejection of the claim was confirmed through internal appeals and
was not set
aside by the ombud when the Plaintiff sought the ombud's
intervention.
[4]
Dissatisfied with the outcome of both the internal claim and the
ombud ruling, the
Plaintiff instituted action against the applicant
on 12 January 2023 by way of a combined summons issued out of this
court. There
appears to be no dispute that the combined summons was
properly served upon the applicant. However, the applicant did not
enter
an appearance to defend and default judgment was consequently
granted on 12 May 2023.
[5]
The applicant seeks the rescission of that default judgment and to be
granted leave
to defend the action.
[6]
The case for the applicant has evolved somewhat through the course of
the application
(as have the substantive and procedural objections to
the application on the part of the plaintiff) and for that reason, it
is
necessary to set them out with some clarity.
The
competing contentions
[7]
In the founding affidavit, the applicant stated in express terms that
the application
for rescission was based on rule 31(2)(b)
alternatively the common law.
[8]
The applicant alleged that the vehicle was being driven at an
excessive speed immediately
prior to the collision and identified the
following three clauses from the insurance policy:
"You must comply
with the terms of the policy
Our liability to provide
cover, and/or to settle any claim, is conditional upon proper
compliance with the provisions of the policy
by you and by anyone who
may seek cover or benefit from it.
The information you
give must be complete and truthful
If you give false
information or wrong descriptions, or if you fail to inform us of any
relevant information, the result may be
that the particular section
affected may be rendered voidable (i.e. you may lose your cover under
that particular section).
You have a duty to
take reasonable care
You must take reasonable
care to prevent loss, damage and accidents."
[9]
These extracted clauses in what was said to be the policy document
were also identified
expressly in the rejection letter.
[10]
As I understand it, the contention is that if the vehicle was driven
at the speeds that are alleged,
then the plaintiff placed himself
outside the boundaries of the insurance policy (whether by way of
intention, recklessness, or
simply the express terms of the policy)
and additionally by necessary inference filed a claim form containing
false information.
[11]
In support of the contentions relating to speed, the applicant
annexed to its founding affidavit
a document known as the "Waidler
Investigation Report". That document, it appears to be agreed,
is the work product of
a company which contends that it has the
capacity to download digital data kept in the telemetry systems of
motor vehicles, and
otherwise to conduct inspections of motor
vehicles. No confirmatory affidavit was provided in support of that
report.
[12]
As regards the reason for default, the applicant set out that it has
an internal process that
requires that processes served upon its head
office (unsurprisingly there appear to be multiple on any given day)
are circulated
via email from the front desk at which service takes
place to various different employees. Those employees are thereafter
required
to consider the processes made against the applicant and to
determine what the next step should be. It was explained by the
applicant
that the particular individual concerned with this claim
had received two emails at approximately the same time from the front
desk staff using the same language to identify that a summons was
attached. The position is alleged to have been that the responsible
employee assumed these to be duplicate emails and therefore
considered only one of them rather than both. Having considered only
one of the emails, it is alleged that this particular summons lay
unnoticed in the offices of the applicant (and in the relevant
email
inbox) until a writ of execution was served subsequent to the grant
of default judgment.
[13]
This relatively straight forward case was met with a counter
application (which broadly targeted
the striking out of the Waidler
Report), and a fullthroated defence alleging both that the
default was grossly negligent and
therefore ought not to be condoned
and also that on the merits:
(a)
the policy terms which were alleged did not form of the contract; and
(b)
that (particularly if the Waidler evidence was disallowed) there was
no factual basis for
a defence.
[14]
The submissions in respect of the striking out of the Waidler Report
were broadly that: it was
hearsay; it was unvalidated expert opinion;
the report was confidential in favour of the plaintiff; and that the
downloading of
data to compile the report was unlawful in that it
contravened the Porsche contractual terms.
[15]
. Faced with this answering affidavit and strike out, the
applicant changed tack somewhat
in reply to contend that it was an
additional ground for rescission under rule 42 that:
(a)
there had been an alleged non-disclosure of a partial payment that
(it is agreed) had been
made by the applicant to the plaintiff; and
(b)
the quantification of damages was not consistent with the terms of
the policy wording.
[16]
As regards the hearsay and unconfirmed nature of the Waidler Report,
the applicant stated in
its reply as follows:
"9.1 I accept
that no confirmatory affidavits in respect of the assessor's report
and the Waidler Report were attached
to the applicant's founding
affidavit;
9.2
the aforesaid reports were referred to, not as proof of their
contents, but in order to
contextualise the applicant's decision to
repudiate the respondent's claim;
9.3
given the nature of these proceedings, it being an application for
rescission, the court
has a discretion to admit hearsay evidence in
the interest of justice;
9.4
in the event of the matter proceeding to trial, the applicant will
qualify the relevant
witnesses as expert witnesses, deliver the
relevant notices and call the witnesses to give
viva voce
evidence;".
[17]
The applicant also explained how it was contended that it was open to
the applicant to put forward
the Waidler Report notwithstanding the
contentions as regards confidentiality and who the client was in
respect of the Waidler
Report. In short it was disputed that any
confidentiality vested in plaintiff and further disputed that the
evidence could be excluded
by reason of terms of contract with
Porsche.
[18]
This reply gave rise to a further application to strike out on behalf
of the plaintiff.
[19]
That application to strike out (which in turn resulted in a cascade
of answering and replying
affidavits related only to the strike out)
sought to strike out those allegations made in support of the
rescission in terms of
Uniform rule 42 and the further allegations
made in support of the reliance upon the Waidler Report.
Rule
42
[20]
By reason of the conclusion that I reach in respect of the claim for
rescission under Uniform
rule 42, it is appropriate (notwithstanding
that the submissions were made only in reply), to commence with an
examination of Uniform
rule 42.
[21]
That rule provides for the rescission of
inter alia
:
"An order or
judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the absence of
any party affected thereby."
[22]
There is no contention that the other subparagraphs of Uniform rule
42(1) are applicable.
[23]
In my view, Uniform rule 42(1) is not available to the applicant.
[24]
As the Constitutional Court made clear
[1]
there are two requirements for a rescission of this form. Firstly,
the party seeking the rescission must have been absent, and
secondly,
the court must have made an error. For the most part, these are to be
treated as two distinct requirements.
[25]
Importantly however, the Supreme Court of Appeal has identified
[2]
that: "... In a case where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled
to judgment in the absence of the defendant the judgment if
granted
cannot be said to have been granted erroneously in the light of a
subsequently disclosed defence. A court which grants
a judgment by
default like the judgments we are presently concerned with, does not
grant the judgment on the basis that the defendant
does not have a
defence: it grants the judgment on the basis that the defendant has
been notified of the plaintiff's claim as required
by the rules, that
the defendant, not having given notice of an intention to defend, is
not defending the matter and that the plaintiff
is in terms of the
rules entitled to the order sought. The existence or non-existence of
a defence on the merits is an irrelevant
consideration and, if
subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a validly obtained judgment
into an erroneous judgment."
[26]
I pause to point out that insofar as it was contended that it was an
error to grant judgment
in the full amount as opposed to that amount
less the prior payment referred to above, The Plaintiff gave
instructions for the
abandonment of that portion of the default
judgment equivalent to the prior payment. In view of the conclusion
to which I come
in respect of the other grounds for rescission it is
unnecessary for me to consider either whether that would have been an
error
of the form contemplated under Uniform rule 42 or whether the
abandonment would have been sufficient to cure the error.
[27]
In respect of the other contentions in respect of Rule 42, it is my
view that the contentions
of the applicant in respect of Uniform rule
42 fall outside the parameters of those forms of judgment which the
Supreme Court has
indicated may be rescinded pursuant to Uniform rule
42. There appears to me to have been no error of process and what is
raised
is more properly described as a defence on the merits.
[28]
As regards the original grounds for rescission (i.e. those set out in
the founding affidavit)
the requirements for such a recission have
been summarised as follows:
[3]
"(a)
he (i.e. the applicant) must give a reasonable explanation of his
default. If it appears
that his default was wilful or that it was due
to gross negligence, the court should not come to his assistance;
(b)
his application must be bona fide and not made with the intention of
merely delaying the
plaintiff's claim;
(c)
he must show that he has a
bona fide
defence to plaintiff's
claim. It is sufficient if he makes out a
prima facie
defence
in the sense of setting out averments which, if established at the
trial, would entitle him to the relief asked for. He
need not deal
fully with the merits of the case and produce evidence that the
probabilities are actually in his favour."
[29]
In my view the first two requirements are sufficiently dealt with by
the applicant in the form
of the detailed explanation for how it came
to be that this particular summons was not defended (i.e. an internal
administrative
error which is reasonably plausible), together with
the evidence that the defence is
bona fide
which manifests in
the internal appeals together with the submissions to the ombud. It
is apparent from the papers (and I do not
seek to be seriously
contested) that the applicant has throughout wished to defend its
rejection of the claim.
[30]
All that remains then is the question of whether there is a
bona
fide
defence.
[31]
In assessing whether a
bona
fide
defence has been raised, the first question if one of law: in other
words, if all the facts were established as alleged by the
applicant,
would that give rise to a defence. Neither party was able to refer to
any case, one way or another, in terms of which
speeding of the
nature alleged would place the insured outside the insurance policy.
However, in my own research, I identified
at least one judgment
[4]
in which it appears that an insurer was successful in resisting a
claim for payment in circumstances where the insured had driven
recklessly. I have no means of determining whether that judgment was
based on an insurance policy consistent with this one but
it does
seem to me that this is at least some authority for the proposition
that reckless driving beyond the permitted speed limit
may act to
exclude liability on the part of the insurer.
[32]
I further have no difficulty with the proposition (at least prima
facie) that it is a term of
an insurance agreement that the insured
must take reasonable care to avoid damage, and a further term that
the claim form must
be honestly compiled. For the purposes of this
rescission judgment, it is unnecessary for me to determine whether
such terms are
express, implied, or tacit (this is a matter of some
contestation).
[33]
Having found that there is a notional legal defence available to the
applicant, all that remains
is to consider whether there are:
"Averments which, if
established at the trial, would entitle [the applicant] to the relief
asked for."
[5]
[34]
This enquiry requires a consideration of whether regard can be had to
the Waidler Report, and
if not, whether it is sufficient simply to
allege that the same evidence would be obtainable in the trial.
[35]
It would self-evidently have been preferable if confirmatory
affidavits had been provided in
the name of the technicians that
compiled the Waidler Report. Nevertheless, having regard to the
preliminary stage of this litigation
(and in particular that it is
civil litigation where the judgment is not binding upon a further
trial court), and further taking
into account that the parties appear
to have co-operated in obtaining that report in the first instance, I
am inclined for the
purposes of this rescission, to admit that report
into evidence.
[36]
I am conscious that the plaintiff contends that the report is
unlawfully obtained (primarily
because it appears to have been
obtained by methods that are contractually precluded by the
manufacturer), and that it is confidential
where confidentiality has
not been waived. It is sufficient to point out that neither a
contractual limitation on obtaining evidence,
nor confidentiality
would necessarily be sufficient grounds (at least prima facie) to
resist a demand that such a report be discovered,
or to resist the
introduction of that report in a civil trial.
[37]
Having determined that the report is admissible and the legal defence
may be raised based on
speeding, it follows that evidence has been
established which if proved at trial, would constitute a
bona
defence
.
[38]
However, even if I were wrong as to the admissibility of the Waidler
Report, I would nonetheless
have found that on the uncontroverted and
unobjectionable evidence, it has persistently been the position of
the applicant that
the collision was a consequence of speeding and
that there is other evidence relating to the nature of the damages to
the vehicle
which may conceivably justify such an inference at trial.
I would therefore have reached the same conclusion even if I had not
admitted the report into evidence.
[39]
Having regard to what I have set out above, it appears to me that
rescission must follow.
Costs
[40]
The parties made contrasting submissions on costs. The applicant
submitted that costs should
be paid by the plaintiff for the entire
rescission application on scale B. In contrast, I understood the
plaintiff’s submission
to be that even if he was unsuccessful
in resisting the rescission, he should not be ordered to pay the
costs.
[41]
There are also the matters of the strike out applications. It will be
apparent from what I have
set out above, that the strike out in
respect of the Waidler Report has not been successful but that is by
reason of an exercise
of my discretion to admit evidence rather than
because the applicant made a comprehensive application for admission
in the first
instance. In my view the applicant ought prudently, as
the plaintiff complains, to have introduced that report together with
confirmatory
affidavits. The second strike out in relation to the
allegedly new case in reply did not need to be considered because,
for reasons
that I have already set out, the rule 42 was inapposite.
However, it is my view that the formalistic strike out approach was
not
the most appropriate manner in which to deal with the allegedly
new case. It might have been considerably simpler to address the
contention by way of a short further affidavit for which leave could
have been sought under Uniform rule 6(5)(e) or
[42]
even to confine the complaint to argument.
[42]
However, the entire recission application was occasioned by default
on the part of the applicant
in filing a notice of intention to
defend. The applicant cannot be insulated from the costs of its own
default. That being said,
having had sight of the founding affidavit,
(and well knowing that it had always been the intention of the
applicant to defend
the proceedings) it would have been more
appropriate, in my view, for the plaintiff to consent to the
rescission.
[43]
Taking all of those considerations into account, and recognising that
some of the evidence upon
which the bona tide defence relies may not
be proved in trial, it appears to me to be an appropriate balancing
exercise to grant
the costs order which I do below.
[44]
In the circumstances, I grant the following order:
(a)
the default judgment granted by this court on 12 May 2023 be and is
hereby rescinded and
set aside;
(b)
the applicant is granted leave to deliver a notice of intention to
defend within five (5)
days of the granting of this order;
(c)
in respect of costs:
(i)
the applicant will pay the costs of the application incurred up to
the date
upon which a notice of intention to oppose the application
was delivered;
(ii)
each party shall bear its own costs in respect of the strike out
applications; and
(iii)
such costs as remain after the preceding two costs orders shall be
costs in the cause.
P
Wallis AJ
DATE
OF HEARING: 14 APRIL
2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 17 APRIL 2025
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicant: Advocate D
Schaup
Attorneys
of Applicant: Nagesh
Maharaj Attorneys
Counsel
for Respondent: Advocate GD Harpur SC
Attorneys
for Respondent: Maraj Inc
[1]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commissioner of Inquiry into Allegations
of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public
Sector
Including Organs of State
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC) at [57]
[2]
Lodhi 2
Properties Investments CC v Bondev Developments (Pty) Ltd
2007 (6) SA 87
(SCA); See also
Centaur
Mining South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cloete Murray NO
[2024] ZASCA 34
(28 March 2024) at [22]
[3]
Erasmus
,
Superior Court Practice, Second Edition, D1 - Rule 31 - 11, Service
25, 2024
[4]
Monametsi
v Miway Insurance
[2021] ZAGPPHC 478 (22 July 2021)
[5]
Grant v
Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949 (2) SA 470
(O) at 476 - 7
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