Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 21South Africa
SixBar Trading 645 CC v ABSA Insurance Company Limited (9855/2015) [2022] ZAKZDHC 21 (19 April 2022)
Headnotes
of the evidence. Exhibit D is the loss adjustor’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## SixBar Trading 645 CC v ABSA Insurance Company Limited (9855/2015) [2022] ZAKZDHC 21 (19 April 2022)
SixBar Trading 645 CC v ABSA Insurance Company Limited (9855/2015) [2022] ZAKZDHC 21 (19 April 2022)
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sino date 19 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCA DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
No:
9855/2015
In
the matter between:
SIXBAR
TRADING 645 CC
PLAINTIFF
and
ABSA
INSURANCE COMPANY
LIMITED
DEFENDANT
ORDER
It
ordered that judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against
the defendant as follows:
(a)
Payment of the sum of R1 200 000.00 (one million two hundred
thousand rand)
(b)
Payment of interest on the said amount at the rate of 15.5% per annum
from 1 April 2014 to date of final payment.
(c)
Cost of suit including costs consequent upon employment of senior
counsel, costs of obtaining the transcripts of the evidence
and the
costs for preparation of written arguments.
JUDGMENT
Delivered on:
Mngadi
J:
[1]
The plaintiff instituted an action against the defendant claiming
R1.2m for loss of rental a loss, (it claimed), was covered
by an
insurance cover issued by the defendant.
[2]
The plaintiff is Sixbar Trading 645 CC, a close corporation
registered and incorporated in terms of the law. The defendant
is Absa Insurance Company Limited a company duly registered in terms
of the company law of the Republic of South Africa.
[3] The
plaintiff in the particulars of claim stated that a written policy of
insurance between the parties was concluded in
June 2012. In
terms of the policy plaintiff paid certain premiums and defendant
indemnified the plaintiff for any damages
suffered by the plaintiff
as a result of occurrence of certain events including the event which
occurred on 2 September 2013 when
a fire occurred at the plaintiff’s
premises situated at 1 Moodie Street in Pinetown. The fire
caused damage to the
premises resulting in the plaintiff suffering
loss of rentals for R1.2m.
[4] The
defendant in its plea admitted that it concluded the insurance policy
with the plaintiff in terms of which it undertook
to indemnify the
plaintiff in terms and conditions contained in the insurance policy
and its schedules. The defendant denied
that the plaintiff
suffered any damages arising from loss of rental in respect of the
premises, and therefore it was not
liable to the plaintiff in
the claimed sum. In essence, the defendant disputed that the
plaintiff suffered loss of rentals
relating to the premises damaged
by fire for which it was liable to indemnify the plaintiff.
[5]
The defendant admitted that the premises were owned by the plaintiff;
were damaged by fire; were so damaged by fire that they
needed to be
rebuilt and that no rental could be obtained by letting the premises
whilst they were damaged. The defendant
contended that it could
only be liable to indemnify the plaintiff for loss of rental in terms
of the policy if at the time the
premises were damaged by fire they
were generating rentals for the plaintiff, which it contended, the
plaintiff failed to establish.
[6] The
plaintiff adduced evidence from two witnesses, namely, Mr. Jusuf
Ebrahim Mansoor and Mr. Naeem Akthar.
The defendant
adduced evidence from three witnesses, namely, Mr. Roland Campbell,
Mr. Gavin Maitre and Mr. Neel Fourie. During
the course of
leading of evidence documents bound into bundles were referred to.
The parties having agreed in the pre-trial
meeting that the documents
will, without further proof, serve as evidence of what they purport
to be without admitting the truth
of the contents thereof and that
copies may be used without the production of the original. A bundle
written “Plaintiff’s
Trial Bundle Vol 1’ was marked
Exhibit A1. This bundle contained the following:
1.
CK2 and CK2A of Sixbar Trading 645 CC. 2.CK2 of E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC. 3. Letter from MaxProp to Mam Hassim
Family Trust. 4. Schedule of VAT for July/August 2013 of
Sixbar Trading 645 CC together with purchases schedule.
5.
VAT201 of Sixbar Trading 645 CC for tax period 2013/08. 6.
VAT reconciliation schedule for Sixbar Trading 645 CC
for
September/October 2013 together with purchases schedule. 7.
VAT201 of Sixbar Trading 645 CC for tax period 2013/10.
8. VAT
statement of account for Sixbar Trading 645 CC of 1 March 2013 to 28
February 2014. 9. Trial balance of Sixbar trading
645 CC from 1
March 2013 to 28 February 2014. 10. Annual Financial statement
of Sixbar Trading 645 CC for year ending 20
February 2014. 11.
History statement of bank transactions in the account of Sixbar
Trading 645 CC for the period June
2013 to September 2013.
12. Reconciliation of payments received from E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC by Sixbar
Trading 645 CC for the period June
2013 to September 2013. 13. VAT reconciliation statement
of E Mart Home Improvement
Centre CC for June/July 2013 together with
purchases schedule. 14. VAT Reconciliation statement of E
Mart Home Improvement
Centre CC for June/July 2013 together with
purchases schedule.
[7]
Volume 2, which was marked Exhibit A2, contained the following
documents: 1. VAT returns for E Mart Home Improvement Centre
CC for
the period end July 2013. 2. VAT returns for E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC for the period end September
2013. 3. VAT
statement of account for E Mart Home Improvement Centre CC 1 March
2013 to 28 February 2014. 4. Trial
balance of E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC from 1 March 2013 to 28 February 2014. 5.
Annual financial statement of E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC for
year ending 28 February 2014. 6. Extract of general ledger for Sixbar
trading 645 CC from 1 March 2013
to 28 February 2014. 7. Undated
letter from Maitre and Associates. 8. Photographs of
building at 1 Moodie Street prior
to renovations. 9.
Photographs of building at 1 Moodie Street after renovations.
10. Agreement of lease between
Sixbar Trading 645 CC and E Mart
Home Improvement Centre. Reconciliation of payments made by E
Mart Home Improvement Centre
CC to Sixbar Trading 645 CC for the
period June 2013 to September 2013.
[8]
In Exhibit B, there were the following documents in respect of both
Sixbar Trading 645 CC and E Mart Home Improvement Centre.
1. SARS VAT
statement of account. 2. SARS Income Tax return ITR 14. 3.
Supplementary Declaration for Companies or Close Corporations
IT14SD.
4. SARS Income tax notice of Assessment ITA34. 5. Statement of
Account Assessed Tax ITSA. and the Reconciliation of payments
made by
E Mart Home Improvement Centre CC to Sixbar Trading 645 CC
as well as Standard Bank bank statements of Sixbar
Trading 645 CC
from no. 122 to 146 (with no. 134 missing)
[9]
Bundle marked Exhibit C contains mainly documents relating to
developments subsequent to the fire on 2 September 2013.
The
documents in the bundle those relevant shall be referred to in the
summary of the evidence. Exhibit D is the loss adjustor’s
bundle. It contained reports made by the loss adjustor.
In Exhibit B (the Gavin Maître’s bundle)
it
contained for both Sixbar Trading 645 CC and E Mart Home Improvement
Centre CC the following documents: Annual General
Ledger from 1
March 2013 to 28 February 2014; Annual trial balance from 1 March
2013 to 28 February 2014, Annual Financial Statements
28 February
2014 Exhibit E is the defendant’s supplementary
affidavit.
[10]
I shall start by summarising the evidence of Naeem Akthar although Mr
Akthar was the second witness for the plaintiff.
He testified
that he was from Pakistani where he grew up and got his schooling.
His language is Urdu which he reads and writes.
He came to
South Africa in 1997, when he arrived in South Africa he could not
speak English. He has acquired some knowledge
of English, which
he speaks for general conversation, but he cannot read nor write in
English. He started as a packer in
a hardware store. He
left the job and he sold goods to hawkers. He then opened a
small shop selling clothes.
In 2001, he opened a hardware store
in Pinetown in Railway Road in the premises let to him by A K Ismal
at a small rental.
He used to work with AK Asmal at the
hardware store. He owned the hardware store through a close
corporation Sixbar Trading
645 CC (Sixbar) of which he was the sole
member. He traded under the name Nu Pinetown Builders
Suppliers. In 2007,
he opened a second hardware store at 14/16
Chapel Street, Pinetown. This store he opened it under a close
corporation with
the name E Mart Home Improvement Centre (E Mart) in
the premises that he had bought. It was situated on the back of Nu
Pinetown
Builders Suppliers. He remained the sole member
of both the close corporations Sixbar and E Mart. He
operated
the businesses by buying in bulk and selling for cash.
He sought suppliers with the best deals and he bought in bulk.
He had more than fifty suppliers.
[11]
Mr Akhtar testified that in about June 2012 a property at 1 Moodie
Street in Pinetown, which was a factory, was placed on sale.
The property was in a corner about 300 to 400 metres from his
businesses. He decided to buy the property as an investment.
He
then renovated the property and he took an insurance through a broker
for the premises. He consulted a property letting
company Max
Prop which advised him and provided him with a report stating the
market related rental for the property to be R190 000.00
a
month. He referred to a letter in Exhibit A2 from Maxprop dated
20 December 2012. The letter confirmed instructions
to find a
tenant for the property constituting 173 square metres of office,
1 280 square metres of shops and storage and 804
square metres
of yard and parking at a monthly rental of R191 845 excluding
VAT. Mr Akthar stated that the agent
advised him that
potential tenants complained about the parking, he then opened up the
parking. The premises were a proper
showroom. He
testified that before he could find a tenant for the premises A S
Ismal told him that he shall not renew his
lease which was due to
expire in August 2014. He then decided to expand his
premises of E Mart. The expansion,
which was carried on whilst
trading, was continuing meant that E Mart needed a space to store its
stock. The premises at
1 Moodie Street were available since he
would move to those premises when his lease with Ismal
expired. The premises
were more suitable in that the
renovations of E Mart premises would be completed within a year and
the premises were not far to
the premises of E Mart. He
then decided that E Mart shall lease the premises from Sixbar for a
period of a year at
a rental of R140 000 per month plus VAT. Mr
Akthar testified that he was advised that the lease for tax purposes
must be
reduced into writing. His staff prepared the lease from
a specimen made available. The person who typed the lease wrote
the year 2014 instead of 2013, which was corrected when he signed the
lease. The lease was for the period 1 July 2013
to 1 July
2014. In July 2013, E Mart started storing its stock at the
premises at 1 Moodie Street. He signed the lease
on behalf of
both Sixbar and E Mart. He signed the lease and it was
filed. He referred to the copy of the lease.
It consists
of twenty (20) pages with 32 clauses. The person who signed on
behalf of the lessor and the lessee signed it.
It signed by two
witnesses who witnessed for the lessor and for the lessee. The
three signees signed each page of the document.
The year 2014
for the date is typed with 4 of 2014 deleted and on top of the
deletion it is written 3. The typed lease left
a space for the
place, day month to be completed. The particulars are completed
by long hand which suggests that when they
were completed it was
noted that the year typed 2014 was not correct and it corrected by
deleting the typed 4 and writing 3 by
long hand.
[12]
Mr Akthar testified that a big signage depicted on the photos was put
at the premises. It was in the name of E Mart to
show that E
Mart was using the premises. The photo shows the signage in
blue yellow orange colours. It is a big board rectangular
in shape
which could be 3.5m x1.2m Its length runs upwards and it has its
steel frame and it is affixed along the a big wall forming
the front
of the building. The word E Mart is written on the top part in
big orange letters.
[13] Mr
Akthar testified that he operated the bank accounts of both E Mart
and Sixbar since he was the sole member of both
entities. He
transferred money by means of EFT from one account to the other and
vice versa. He said he made bulk transfers
when there was a
need. The transfers included loans and loan repayments between
the two entities. In the transfers he included
the rent paid by E
Mart to Sixbar. He explained what was included in the transfer
to his accountant. The transfers
appeared in the bank
statements but he did not reference in the bank statement the
transfer since he was the only person transacting
on the bank
accounts and he knew what was included in each transfer.
The goods belonging to E Mart were stored in the
premises at 1 Moodie
Street. On 2 September 2013, the premises were damaged by
fire. On the same day, the defendant
as the Insurer was advised
of the fire. The defendant took over the processing of the
insurance claims. Eventually
the defendant settled the
claim for damage to the building and its contents. The claim
for the contents was settled with
E Mart since the stock damaged in
the fire belonged to E Mart. The defendant required invoices
for the goods damaged in the
fire and it was furnished with the
invoices. The defendant offered to settle the claim for loss of
rental by paying R300 000.00
which was not acceptable to him.
He had claimed loss of rental at R140 000. 00 per month.
He claimed R270 000
for the stock and only R150 000
was paid. Some of the stock was not damaged. It was
claimed that for the building
he was underinsured, he expected to be
paid R2.5 m. He claimed R70 000 for office furniture and
he was paid R29 000.
He claimed for loss of rental at
R140 000 per month. The rebuilding of the premises was completed
in November 2014.
He moved Nu Pinetown Builders Suppliers to
the premises in January 2015. He could not understand the
reasons of the defendant
to refuse to settle the claim for loss of
rental in terms of the insurance cover.
[14]
Mr Akthar testified that he sold building material for cash. In
February 2014, his annual turnover was R12.5m and he
made a gross
profit of R1.4m as shown in the financial statements. He took
the insurance in June 2012 through the broker
M I Casim. The
premises at that time were vacant. He cannot remember whether
he told Mr Casim about the lease of the
premises. His manager
attended the putting in of the insurance claim. The persons
attending to the claim from the defendant
met with his staff most of
the time. He did not know whether initially the claim was
for the building only but he told
the defendant’s
representative of all the loss. The accountant prepared the
financial statements for both Sixbar and
E Mart. It was about
August 2007 when E Mart opened for business because they celebrate
its birthdate in August. He
understands that in 2014 the
turnover of E Mart was R15 m with a gross profit of R4.4m. E
Mart and Sixbar were selling more
or less the same type of goods. The
area of Sixbar was about 500 square metres since it was part of a
hotel with a shop and a vacant
area; some of the stock was kept
outside. Ismal in 2013 charged him a rent of R40 000 plus
VAT. He had a written
lease with Ismal. Ismal
told him in February 2013 that he would not renew the lease. He
purchased the premises
at 1 Moodie Street for R2 m and he took a bond
for R1.4 m. He did renovations to the premises including entrance
area and parking
in the region of R2 m. The building measured
about 1 245 square metres. He rebuilt the premises
after the
fire and he completed it in November 2014. The
expansion of E Mart is not yet complete but E Mart operates in the
completed
part of the premises. He bought the land in
which E Mart operates in 2005 and he completed the building in 2007.
The floor space is more than 800 square metres the total area being
about 1 200 square metres. There is an upstairs
area.
Three floors have been completed but he intends to add other floors.
There is a storage area underground.
[15]
Mr Akthar testified that on 2 September 2013 when the fire broke out
there three people in the premises, namely; a security
guard, a
cleaner and a person who assisted with deliveries. His staff
furnished the information required by the defendant.
He also
engaged later the services of a professional claims service
provider. He is aware that a total amount of R1 776 000
was claimed for loss of rental but the amount of the claim was
reduced although he does not know exactly how it was calculated.
His staff Ronnel and Rachel worked in the processing of the claims.
He did not know when the lease agreement between Sixbar
and E
Mart was furnished to the defendant. The fax transmission
indicates that it was furnished in February 2014. He
had a
meeting with the broker in the second week after the fire and he
explained to him his loss due to the fire. Shaida
Ismal is his
manager and she has worked with him for a long time. She
assisted him in preparation of the lease. He
did not know that
in January 2014, a claim for loss of rental was raised for the first
time and the copy of the lease was furnished
in February 2014.
Ronnel who assisted in the typing of the lease is no longer working
for him.
[16]
Mr Akthar testified that he owned in his personal capacity the
premises E Mart operates from. E Mart pays rental of R22 500
per month. Sixbar paid a rental of R40 000 per month which
was increasing. He charged E Mart for the premises at 1 Moodie
Street
R140 000 which was less than R191 000 recommended by
MaxProp. E Mart needed a warehouse near its business
premises.
It had to rent the entire premises at 1 Moodie Street. He
claimed for the value of the stock damaged in the
fire. He did
not remember offhand the value of the stock that was not damaged.
He started storing stock at the premises
in June 2013. He
prepared rent invoices, which he gave to the bookkeeper.
[17] The
first witness called by the plaintiff was Yusuf Ebrahim Mansoor.
He testified that he is a registered accountant
holding a B. Com
degree in accounting and Khan Salajee & Company employs him as an
accountant. Khan, Salajee & Company
is a firm of chartered
accountants and auditors. He is the person in charge of keeping
the books of account of both Sixbar
and EMart. He
prepares the general ledger, the trial balances, the necessary
schedules and the financial statements.
He in addition prepares
the VAT returns. He confirmed that he prepared the
documents in the bundles relating
to both Sixbar and E Mart.
In respect of Sixbar the VAT returns for the period July and August
2013 were due on 25
September 2013. He calculated a figure of
R21 049.25. He arrived at the figure by taking into
account total sales
from the bank statements, cash and rental
invoices furnished by the client. He knew of the structure, the
relationship and
the fact that Mr Akhtar who was the client owned the
entities. The rental received by Sixbar from E Mart for July
and August
2013 amounted to R319 200 at R159 600 a month of
which R19 600 was VAT. He did the reconciliation of input and
output
VAT and the amount paid to SARS was R21 049.25. The
return was filed on 18 September 2013 and the payment was made on
27
September 2013. The same process was done for the
September/October 2013 and the amount paid to SARS was R21 226.92.
He stated that in November/December 2013 the amount paid was
R20 344.04
[18]
Mr Mansoor testified that he prepared the general ledger after every
two months and the trial balance at the end of the financial
year.
The trial balance for Sixbar for the period from 1 March 2013 to 28
February 2014 showed sales of R12 100 585.96
and the rent
of R420 000. The rental received for the property at 1
Moodie Street from E Mart for the months July, August
and September
at R140 000 per month exc. VAT is reflected in the income
statement. The VAT schedule for E Mart
for the period June/July
2013 records a rent invoice of R159 600 with R19 600 as VAT
portion. There was no rent
for June 2013 because the property
was not rented out. He testified that E Mart VAT return period
June/July VAT return was submitted
on 23 August 2013. The E
Mart reconciliation for August/ September 2013 shows rent of
R159 600.00, which includes R19 600
VAT a month. The
reconciliation was done and an amount of R40 982.66 was paid to
SARS. The return was filed on
22 October 2013 and the payment
made on 30 October 2013. The financial statement of E Mart
shows a three-month rental as
an expense and it appears in the trial
balance in the amount of R542 500.00 which excludes VAT. He
testified that E Mart paid
rent to Sixbar by bank transfers. Mr
Akthar would explain to him what was included in the transfer and he
prepared
the schedules.
[19]
Mr Mansoor testified that he started working on the books of the
entities in 2012. He visited their business premises.
He
prepared the general ledger of Sixbar from the bank statements not
from the till slips. He used journal entries to capture
in the
general ledger items not in the bank statements including cash not
deposited into the bank account e.g. the journal entry
4 dated 28
February 2014 relating to total cash sales not deposited into a bank
account. He captured amounts in the general
ledger inclusive of
VAT because he captured them from the bank statements. He
captured items from the bank statements to
the general ledger and he
did not check them against invoices. Item 261 shows rent paid
by Sixbar to Pinetown Imperial Hotel
but he was not shown the lease.
The bank statement had the reference AK Ismal. He
knew that EMart operated
from its premises and at the premises at 1
Moodie Street, which premises were used as a warehouse. The
item in the general
ledger referring to rent received was done at the
end of the year by a journal entry. Sixbar only received rental
from E
Mart. One entry refers to ADJ and INV001, which suggests that
an invoice was given to him. An invoice would show that
Sixbar called for the rent. All the transfers from Sixbar to E
Mart had no particular reference. The schedules were
prepared
after every two months. There was no source document explaining each
transfer. He relied on Mr Akhtar who explained
what the
transfer was for. In the annual trial balance, he reflected rental as
revenue. In the financial statement, he explained
that that
rental falls under services. The financials relating to
submission to SARS showed rental as part of revenue.
[20]
Mr Mansoor stated that the general ledger of E Mart shows as a
journal entry rental accrued to a member for a year, which was
for
the premises they traded from. It is in the amount of R122 500
from March 2013 to February 2014 and amount excludes
VAT. The
rental has since increased. E Mart was paying rent for
two premises. The client gives the cash amount
in the general ledger
to him. The July/August rental is per invoices and for
VAT purposes, it was enough to record
rent accrued. The
statement from SARS for the period 1 March 2013 to 28 February 2014
shows that payments were made as follows,
on 13 May 2013 a sum of
R20 967.62, on 31 July 2013 a sum of R21 306.16, on 27
September 2013 a sum of R21 049.25,
on 21 November 2013 a sum of
R21 226.91, on 25 January 2014 a sum of R20 344.04 and on
28 March 2014 a sum of R20 567.33.
It is not strange that
the amounts paid were constant in the region of R20 000.
He used the Proc Acc software package,
which was sufficient for the
purpose. He prepared and submitted the income tax return and
received the tax assessment. He
included rentals under revenue.
He did not dispute that the transfers between the two entities were
R285 000 in February
2013, R173 000 in March, R170 000
in May, R232 000 in June, R220 000 in July, R225 000
in August, R610 000
in September. They were during
that period about thirty. The entries were purchases, rentals and
loan repayments.
There was no way Sixbar could allow E Mart to
use its premises and not pay rent. Mr Akthar owned both
entities and he could
effect set offs. E Mart by occupying the
premises at 1 Moodie Street it became liable to pay rent. In a letter
dated 14 March
2014, he stated, an amount of R478 800 was for
purchases but his colleague Khan said it was for loan repayments.
Mr Akthar must have told him that it was purchases. He did not
know why Khan said it was loan repayments. He did see
the lease
between Sixbar and E Mart. He admitted that the flow of funds between
the entities with no source documents and precise
referencing could
create some confusion.
[21]
The defendant first called Mr Roland Campbell. He testified
that he was an insurance loss adjustor, and a professional
claims
handler on behalf of Insurers and Insurance Brokers. A claims
handler receives appointment from the insurance company.
He
uses his expertise to manage the processing of the claim. He
has been a loss adjustor for 30 years. He testified that
relating to
the fire damage of the premises at 1 Moodie Street; he received an
appointment from the defendant. He familiarised
himself with
the nature of the insurance cover. He contacted Mr Akhtar
because in a fire urgency is of importance.
He met him client
at his office at E Mart and became aware that he could not
communicate well in English. He went with him
to the premises
at 1 Moodie Street. There was nobody from the broker.
He conducted site inspection and he obtained
information from those
around. He recorded things to note in his notes. He
concentrated on two areas of the building.
There was a staircase to a
double storey section and there was an office. There was a
section damaged by smoke, a pile of
new garage doors, a stack of
wheelbarrows, which took about one fifth of the section of the
building. The roof on the bottom area
where the fire started had
collapsed. There was a hip of sunawre and toilet seats, which
had been stacked covering about
15 or 20 square metres of the area.
There were in another area steel cages along the wall, which were
empty. There was an
upstairs section with a lot of furniture, which
was covered by soot of smoke.
[22] Mr
Campbell testified that his appointment required him to focus on the
building and not the contents of the building.
He was not
required to verify stock in the building at the time of the fire. It
was only later that a claim for stock materialised.
He as a
loss adjustor does not formulate a claim for a client. It is
the task of the broker to formulate a claim. He
and his
companion were informed that when the fire started there was a
cleaner and a security guard in the premises. His colleague
Brian
Goodwin interviewed both the cleaner and the security guard. The
building in their report was described as unoccupied commercial
premises. He formed the view that the building was
substantially empty but now he can withdraw substantially. No one
mentioned
loss of rental to him. He took the photos of his
observation except photo 6 and 7, which he did not take, and they
were not
taken in his presence. He took the photos on 3
September 2013. He took many photos and some of those are not
before
court. In his second report dated 1 October
2013, he provided for a standard loss of rental. On 3 December
2013 in his report he provided that, a loss of rental claim is not
subject to underinsurance determination. On 21 January
2014, he
noted in his report that the building served as a storage of E Mart.
He informed the client of the loss of rental
claim and he called for
the copy of the lease. He was furnished for the first
time with the details that loss of rental
was claimed at R140 000
a month. He recommended the settlement of the other claims.
He thought the claim for loss
of stock was overstated. Either
the stock was not there or it was damaged by fire. He
recommended that the claim for
loss of rental be referred to an
accountant.
[23]
Mr Campbell testified that whenever he visited the site he made
notes. He made about four visits. He saw two of
the notes
he made. He made the notes for his own record and when he
consulted with defendant’s attorneys, he had the
notes he
made. He recommended that R50 000 be reserved for the
claim for loss of rental. It was not his duty to enquire
about the
claim for loss of rental. Even if the lease expired in
September 2013, a claim for loss of rental was maintainable.
It
is not a requirement in terms of the policy that there be an actual
tenant at the time the premises are damaged. His estimation
at
R50 000 was quite low. It would take months to rebuild the
premises after the claim has been investigated and settled.
He
is aware that the limit for a claim for loss of rental is R1, 2m.
A sum of R300 000 was offered to settle the claim
for loss of
rental. He did not know on what basis the defendant made the
offer. The offer was made in June 2014.
He did not know
when the site was handed back to Mr Akthar. The building was
unoccupied but if it was a warehouse with people working
there, it
was not abandoned.
[24] Mr
Campbell testified that he saw the E Mart signage displayed on the
building of the premises at 1 Moodie Street.
It was made of
synthetic material on a steel frame installed up on a wall but that
did not mean it was E Mart premises. No
claim form needed to be
completed to lodge a claim. He did not ask the client how much
he claimed for loss of rental. The
client was not at all times
assisted by a broker. On 2 September 2013 when he visited the
site, he did not know that the
client had a cover for stock. The
policy covering the stock was separate it was not with the policy
covering the building, it was
E Mart separate policy. E
Mart had its own insurance policy with the defendant. He had
dealings with the broker
five months after the loss. The building
claim was dealt with; it was followed by the claim for contents.
He first asked
for supporting documents in January 2014. He has
no document to show what he requested on what date. The
suspicion
relating to the loss of rental claim was the result of the
delay in claiming loss of rental. He did not see the geysers in the
building damaged by fire, they may have been in another part of the
building. The other photos do not show when they were
taken but
if you open them in a computer and right click, the date shall be
shown. He received the bank account statement
and the VAT
return, which is all what he requested. He did not request rent
invoices for the three months July/August/ September.
Goods made of
plastic material would be completely destroyed in a fire. He
did not clear the debris. Shower doors were
allowed as stock
destroyed in the fire. He saw them but he did not take photos
of them. There were many photos showing
damaged goods which
were not presented as evidence. He was aware before January
2014 of the potential claim for loss of rental.
[25] The
defendant called Gavin Maitre as its second witness. Mr Maitre
testified that he was a qualified registered
accountant and auditor.
He qualified to practice as a chartered accountant in 1986. He
has been practising as a chartered
accountant and auditor for 24
years and he is a member of the South African Institute of Chartered
Accountants and of the Independent
Regulatory Board of Auditors.
He listened to the evidence of Mansoor. He has reviewed the
books of account of Sixbar
and E Mart relating to the year 2013/4. It
was not normal to use bank statements for sale figures.
Normally one uses invoices.
A close corporation must operate an
invoice based or till based system. A business of the size of
Sixbar should use a computer
software for its sales to transfer them
to its accounting records. Cash would be money used for
business purposes without
having it deposited into a bank account.
VAT on overheads was excluded. The financial statements
indicate that
they were prepared after the fact to reconcile with the
amounts in the VAT returns. The manual calculations means that
the
figures were manipulated. . VAT figures are too
consistent. VAT figures of the business of this size must
vary.
The figures according to him were manufactured.
[26]
Mr Maitre testified that an annual general ledger is a working
document used on ongoing basis to run the business to control
its
debtors, creditors and stock. Stock purchases and sales are
transferred to the general ledger. To give an idea of how
much is
owed.to the creditors. The general ledger prepared by Mansoor
every two months for VAT calculation looks like it
was prepared after
the event. It appears the general ledger was not prepared
contemporaneously; it was prepared at the end
of the year not after
every two months. If it were prepared every two months, they
would reallocate VAT portion every two
months. The use of
journal entries is not correct. The accounting package
determines VAT and allocate it to the VAT
account. The bank
statements entries have no reference numbers relating to rent
transfers or rental of R159 600. The
cash figure is not based on
any source document. It used to arrive at the desired amount
for VAT. It constitutes fraud.
The accountant perpetrated
fraud. He did not know whether he did so knowingly or
unknowingly. He prepared his
initial opinion based on the
documents he had reviewed. He formed the view that the
accountant committed fraud when he reviewed
the documents just before
he testified after he had received further documents. He
concluded that they were prepared to support
a false claim for loss
of rental. He cannot dispute that when he formed his earlier
opinion he had all the documents he had
requested. He
restated that the general ledger was prepared after the event but he
did not know for what purpose. He
did not know why it was
not put to Mansoor that he prepared the general ledger after the
event and that he perpetrated fraud.
He did not request to be
furnished with the financials of the other years other than
2013/2014. He determined that the documents
he received are the
same documents submitted to SARS. He found it unusual that the
VAT payments would be consistent around
R20 000.
[27]
Mr Maitre stated that he was asked to review the financials of the
two entities, he was not asked to carry out an audit. He
was given a
set of documents. He did not ask for additional documents and
he did not have a complete set of documents.
He carried out the
review by checking sales, VAT returns, general ledger and
reconciliations. He did not state in his report
that the
documents were manufactured. He cannot explain why he did not
pick up the discrepancies when he carried the review
and prepared his
report or when he consulted in preparation for trial. He agreed
that a general ledger is an internal document
and he cannot dispute
it that the plaintiff did not require it as a control document.
He did not examine the accounting package
used by Mansoor. He
said there is no problem with the manner Mansoor dealt with bank
charges and he said the VAT return could
have been manipulated for
other purposes other than to support a claim for loss of rental.
He did not ask for back up documents
to support figures in the VAT
return.
[28]
The last witness called by the defendant is Neel Fourie. Mr
Fourie testified that in 2013 he was in the employment of
the
defendant a regional claims manager in the KwaZulu-Natal region.
He exercised oversight over all claims submitted to
the defendant for
payment. The claims submitted by Mr Akthar were part of
the claims he was involved with.
The claims could be
lodged or reported in any manner. The defendant would record it
and the claim processed. There
was no prescribed manner to
claim. The records in his system indicate that claim
244091 with claim address 1 Moodie
Street Pinetown relating a
building on fire with the date of incident being 2 September 2013 was
noted on 2 September 2013 and
a loss adjustor was appointed to
process the claim. The loss adjustor than furnished progress
reports. The related records
in the form of screen grabs indicate
14-16 Chapel Street reported on 10 December 2013 and then next record
refers stock property
and loss of rental reported on 7 March 2014
also related to incident on 2 September 2013.
[29]
Mr Fourie testified that the claim for loss of rental on 7 March 2014
fell outside the period. The defendant had a view
that the
originating claim gave rise to the claim for loss of rental since the
assessor’s report referred to loss of rental
claim. It
held that everything must be done to assist the client and that a
draconian approach be avoided and the client
be treated fairly.
He testified that in the end the claim was not accepted since the
defendant was not satisfied that the
plaintiff proved its claim.
The matter was referred to the Ombudsman who came to the same
conclusion. The delay
in reporting the claim raised a question
mark. There was also a problem relating to the lease agreement,
and it appears that
there was not much going on at the premises at
the time. Mr Fourie testified that as a gesture of goodwill the
defendant offered
to pay the plaintiff R300 000 which the plaintiff
did not accept. The broker owns the relationship between the
client and
the broker. The Insurer is under strict rules not to
interfere with the relationship.
[30] It
is clear, in my view, that the defendant disputes that the plaintiff
suffered a loss of rental covered by the insurance
policy in
question.
South African Law of Insurance
by Gordon (2
nd
edition) page 75 states: ‘Insurance is a contract nominate,
consensual and of good faith, whereby in consideration of a certain
premium, the losses which may arise from the danger to the property
of another are undertaken to be made good.’ The
insurable
interest in the loss of rental insurance cover is the risk to lose
the right to claim rental. In this matter it
is common cause
that the plaintiff owned the premises at 1 Moodie Street, that the
premises were commercial premises that could
be let, that the fire on
2 September 2013 damaged the premises rendering then unlettable, that
the premises remained in that condition
until they were rebuilt.
[31]
The dispute between the parties is whether at the time the premises
were damaged by fire were actually let. The plaintiff
in this
regard sought to rely on a lease agreement and on the financials of
both the alleged lessor and the lessee and the VAT
returns.
The defendant challenged the alleged lease agreement disputing
that it is a genuine lease agreement suggesting
that it is a forged
document created to substantiate a claim for loss of rental.
Similarly, the defendant challenges the
financials the plaintiff
sought to rely on. It did so on the basis that they were not
true financials reflecting the true
financial position of the
entities. It claims that they contained manipulated figures and
no reliance can be placed on them,
and that the schedules in support
of VAT return figures were prepared to make it look like rental had
been included in the output
VAT figures. .
[32]
The dispute relates to whether the premises were let at the time, not
whether after the damage by fire were lettable or not.
However,
the plaintiff’s claim is for loss of a right to claim rental
for the premises for the period the premises were unlettable.
It follows that it needs to be determined whether what is in dispute
is something that needs to be proved in terms of the policy
of
insurance concluded by the parties. Does the policy of
insurance require the insured at the time of the occurrence of
the
event to have actually let the premises? The relevant part of
the Insurance Policy provides: ‘Subject to the terms,
exceptions and conditions ( precedent or otherwise) and in
consideration of, and conditional upon, the prior payment of the
premium
by or on behalf of the Insured and receipt thereof by
or on behalf of Absa Insurance Company, Absa Insurance Company agrees
to
indemnify or compensate the Insured by payment or at its
option,by replacement, reinstatement or repair in respect of the
defined event occurring during the period of insurance and as
otherwise provided under Sub-sections below up to the sum insured,
limits of indemnity, compensation and other accounts specified’.
The plaintiff’s case is that at the time
the
premises were damaged by fire they were lettable and they were
actually let. On the other hand, the defendant does
not
dispute that the premises were lettable but disputes that they were
actually let.
[33] In
respect of Rent the policy provides: ‘Loss of rent as a result
of the insured buildings being so damaged by any
of the insured
events rendering them untenantable, but only for the period necessary
for the reinstatement and for the amount not
exceeding 30 (thirty)
percent of the sum insured on the affected building. The basis
of the calculation shall be the actual
rent receivable or payable
immediately preceding the damage.’ The evidence of Mr
Akhtar that R140 000 plus VAT
is a reasonable market monthly
rental for the premises at the time they were damaged by fire is not
disputed or challenged by any
other evidence. The determination
by MaxProp on which Mr Akhtar relied is supported by one
made by Pam Golding
Properties dated 17 March 2015 (page 126 of
Exhibit C) which concluded that based on research conducted and
experience, the market
related rental of the premises as at 17 March
2014 was R155 000.00 ex VAT. It follows that based
on a calculation
on the basis of a monthly rental of R140 000.00,
it is not disputed that the claim for loss of rental in the amount of
R1.2m
falls within the allowed limit.
[34]
The question of what the plaintiff is required to prove to show that
the basis of the calculation is the ‘actual rent
receivable or
payable immediately preceding’ must be looked at. The
defendant in the closing address states :
there was a debate during
the course of the trial whether the plaintiff was entitled to claim
loss of rental in the absence of
any lease agreement at all on the
basis that but for the fire it could have leased out the premises to
a notional tenant.
The plaintiff was in agreement that his was
not the case which was brought. The plaintiff’s case has
always been that
there was a lease agreement in place and the
plaintiff’s claim for rental was the rental arising from that
lease’ In
my view, the plaintiff’s claim is brought
in terms of the insurance policy and the terms of the policy
determines what the
plaintiff needs to prove to succeed with its
claim. The defendant contends that it is not enough to show that the
calculation is
based on the fair and reasonable rental for the
premises at the time of the damage. The phrase ‘actual
rent receivable
or payable’ is not defined in the insurance
policy. The phrase must be interpreted following the trite canon of
interpretation.
In
Centriq Insurance Company
Ltd v
Oosthuizen and Another
[2019] ZASCA 112019
(3) SA 387 (SCA) para
17 the court held : ‘Insurance contracts are contracts like any
other and must be construed by having
regard to their language,
context and purpose in what is a unitary exercise. A
commercially sensible meaning is to be adopted
instead of one that is
insensible or at odds with the purpose of the contract. The
analysis is objective and is aimed at
establishing what the parties
must be taken to have intended, having regard to the words they used
in the light of the document
as a whole and of the factual matrix
within which they concluded the contract.’ In
Guardrisk
Insurance Company Limited v
Café Chameleon CC
(632/20) [2020] ZASCA 173;
[2021] 1 All SA 707
(SCA) ; 2021 (2)
SA 323 (SCA) (17 December 2020) Cachalia JA at para 13
held: In this analysis it must borne in mind
that insurance contracts
are ‘contracts of indemnity’. They should therefore
be interpreted ‘reasonably
and fairly to this end.’ In
Kliptown Clothing Industries (Pty) Ltd v Marine Trade Insurance Co
of SA Ltd
1961(1) SA 103 (A) at 107A-B Shreiner JA,(citing May on
Insurance (4 ed) at 174-175) held: ‘No rule, in the
interpretation
of a policy, is more firmly established , or more
imperative and controlling , than that, in all cases, it must be
liberally construed
in favour of the insured, so as not to defeat
without a plain necessity his claim to the indemnity, which in making
the insurance
, it was his object to secure. When the words
are, without violence, susceptible of two interpretations that which
will sustain
the claim and cover the loss, must in preference be
adopted.’
[35]
In this case the phrase refers to ‘actual rent’, which
suggests that there be rent changing hands. However,
the phrase
‘actual rent’ is part of a phrase referring to
‘receivable or payable’ which includes due rental.
Further, the phrase relates to the basis for calculation of a claim
relating to the period when in fact no rental is receivable
or
payable because the premises are unlettable. The phrase cannot be
interpreted to mean that if the premises were unoccupied because
no
tenant had been found a loss of rental claim is not maintainable.
The phrase requires that the basis of the calculation
be
rental, which is a realistic rental for the premises. This can
be proved by showing that the premises were rented out
and the actual
rental received or receivable in terms of the lease or by other
means. The evidence produced by the
plaintiff relating to
the nature and condition of the premises at the time, the fair and
reasonable market related rental for the
premises and the fact that
essentially the plaintiff was entitled to receive rental by letting
the premises are relevant factors.
They form factors that
constitute the proper basis for the calculation of the loss of rental
claim.
[36]
The defendant disputes that the plaintiff proved its claim. It
based its conclusion partly in the delay in claiming for
loss of
rental. The defendant paid the claim relating to the damage to the
building and the claim relating to the contents of the
building.
The defendant states that it was advised of the claim for loss of
rental in January 2014. The defendant never
rejected the claim
for loss of rental on the basis that it was lodged out of time.
It accepted that the claim originated
from the fire on 2 September
2013 an incident reported to it on the same day and from that date it
was seized with its investigation.
It admits that it was aware
of the potential claim for loss of rental since it was aware that the
building was insured by it for
loss of rental. It has not pleaded
that it was misled by the plaintiff or that the plaintiff failed to
disclose material facts
to it or supplied it with misleading
information when it claimed. It has not claimed that it was
prejudiced by the late pursuing
of the claim. Further, it had
no prescribed procedure that was not followed for claiming in terms
of its insurance policy.
The plaintiff had no idea that having
reported the event to the Insurer it would not investigate all the
claims relating to the
insured premises. The plaintiff did not
withhold any information requested from it; on the contrary, it
furnished whatever information
was requested from it. In my view.
there are no basis to blame the plaintiff for the defendant’s
failure to deal with the
claim for loss of rental soon after it was
reported to it that the premises for which it had issued a cover for
loss of rental
had been damaged by fire. It is significant that
Mr Campbell in a letter dated 20 August 2014 writing on instructions
from
the defendant wrote as follows: ‘We refer to the above
matter and write under instructions from Absa Insurance Company,
specifically
relating to your loss of rent claim. You will
recall that the matter was referred to independent accountants.
Insurers
have reviewed the matter and in view of certain
discrepancies without prejudice they are prepared to settle the
rental loss of
claim for a maximum of R300 000 including VAT.
The figure is not negotiable.’ The defendant without
being
specific referred to certain discrepancies in the books of
account and financials submitted by the plaintiff. In the summary of
the expert evidence of Maitre in terms of Rule 36(9) (b) it is stated
as follows:
‘
2.
Maître reviewed the following documents which were discovered
by the plaintiff:
‘
2.1
the written agreement of lease between the plaintiff and E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC (E MART)
2.2
the detailed general ledger for the plaintiff and E Mart for the year
ending February 2014;
2.3
the trial balances of the plaintiff and E Mart for the year
ending February 2014;
2.4
the annual financial statements for the plaintiff and E Mart for the
year ending February 2014;
2.5
the VAT statements of account for the plaintiff and E Mart;
2.6
the IT14’s for the plaintiff and E Mart for the year ending
February 2014;
2.
7 the income tax assessments for the plaintiff and E Mart for the
year ending February 2014; and
2.8
the bank statements for the plaintiff for the period from 19 June
2013 to 31 August 2018
3.
It is Maître’s view that neither plaintiff’s nor E
Mart’s detailed general ledger s were prepared
contemporaneously with, or to assist in the running of, their
businesses. In Maître’s view both detailed general
ledgers were prepared after the fact.
4.
The figures recorded in both detailed general ledgers inclusive VAT
which is highly irregular.
5.
The plaintiff’s annual financial statements for the period
ending February 2014 do not record any rental income.
6.
The plaintiff’s Income Tax Return (ITR14) for the financial
year ending 28 February 2014 does not record any rental
received.
7.
Based on a review of the plaintiff’s VAT statement account, the
VAT paid by the plaintiff each period remains dubiously
consistent
for a business of this nature. These figures do not appear to
support the receipt of VAT on rental income from
E Mart.
8.
The plaintiff’s bank statements record payments made by E Mart
but do not record any payments in the amount of R157 000
being
the monthly rental, inclusive of VAT (14%).
9.
In Maître’s view, the plaintiff and E Mart’s books
of account, SARS documents and bank statements do not support
the
conclusion of a lease agreement between them.’
[37]
Mr Maitre in the report to the defendant, which he prepared at the
request of Mr Campbell the insurance assessor, he stated
as follows:
‘
I
was approached by Roland Campbell of DRM and Associates to review the
accounting records of Sixbar Trading 645 CC (Sixbar) and
E Mart Home
Improvement Centre CC (E MART).
The
aim of the review was to determine whether there was any conflicting
entries with regard to the rental paid by E Mart and the
rental
received by Sixbar in view of the insurance claim by Sixbar for the
loss of rental income.
I
requested the following documents from the client:
Sixbar
Trial
balance for the year
Detailed
sales ledger
Detailed
rent received ledger
Detailed
E Mart loan account
Detailed
VAT control account
VAT
statement of account for the year from e-filing
E
Mart
Trial
balance for the year
Detailed
rent paid ledger
Detailed
Sixbar loan account’
Detailed
VAT control account
I
received from Mr Campbell the following:
Bank
statements of Sixbar for the year
VAT
returns of Sixbar for the year
Sixbar
VAT summary for the year
Lease
agreement between Sixbar and E Mart
I
reviewed the rental received and rental paid entries. These
were all done by way of journal entries to rental received/
paid and
the loan account. No actual rental payments were made but there
are a lot of payments between the company loan accounts
A
reconciliation was done between the detailed sales per the ledger and
the detailed sales pre the VAT summary report. Had
the client
done the rental journal after they year-end then there should have
been a discrepancy by the amount of the rental received
which was
R420 000 excluding VAT. However, the difference in the
reconciliation was about R7000.
The
VAT summary was agreed to the VAT return and also to the VAT
statement of account from e-filing. All of them agreed to
each
other.
I
looked at the accounting package used by Sixbar’s accountant.
With this package one is able to go back, make adjustments
and delete
the audit trail. I however have no evidence that this has
happened.
Conclusion
There
is no concrete evidence from the financial records that the entries
relating to the rental received/paid were done in order
to be able to
make a claim against the insurance company.
There
are other reasons as to why the rental entries were passed, ie
shifting of taxable income between companies. However,
I was
not in possession of any final trial balance to be able to determine
this.
It
however appears that the lease agreement may have been drawn up at a
date subsequent to the fire. I recommend that the
lease
agreement be reviewed by a specialist to determine if it is legal, as
the lease agreement does not appear to be at arms length.
As
per the insurance policy the claim can then be determined at market
related rates for warehousing in the area.’
[38]
In my view, it is clear that Mr. Maitre in his evidence is making a
volte-face
with no basis for doing so. In his report he
indicated that from his review he found no evidence justifying a
decision not
to pay the claim, he recommended that the claim be paid.
There is no evidence that anything was found wrong with
the
lease agreement.
[39]
The defendant doubts that the plaintiff had leased the premises to E
Mart. It does not dispute that on the premises
there was
signage for E Mart. It also accepted that the stock in the
premises at the time it caught fire belonged to E Mart
because it
paid E Mart for the damage to the stock. E Mart and Sixbar were
separate entities. E Mart could only use
premises for the
plaintiff by renting them. Both E Mart and Sixbar are business
entities. It would have made no business sense
for the plaintiff to
let E Mart use its premises free. The defendant suspects that
the lease agreement is not a genuine document.
Its suspicion is
based on the fact there is an alteration by deleting 4 and replacing
it with 3 in the date. It further suspects
that because the plaintiff
furnished the lease in February 2014 after the claim for loss of
rental was lodged in January 2014 it
means it prepared it in order to
use it to claim for the loss of rental. But the fact is that it
requested the copy of the
lease in February 2014. Therefore,
there was no delay in furnishing it. Secondly, the alteration
in the lease agreement
is visible with no attempt to hide it.
Thirdly, the error is something that could be discovered and it be
corrected by those
signing the lease. It is simple not enough to
create any suspicion relating to the genuineness of the lease.
[40]
The defendant criticised the plaintiff in the manner it kept its
books of account and the consistency in the amounts paid for
VAT.
It is inconceivable that the plaintiff would have concocted the
entire financials of two entities through a firm of
chartered
accounts to support a claim for the loss of rental. It can also
not be disputed that VAT amounts paid to SARS were
paid before the
claim for the loss of rental. If the said amounts were
calculated factoring the rentals relating to the premises,
they prove
that there was a lease of the premises by E Mart. The
shortcomings in the books of account and the financials
would have
been of some significance if they stood alone. In this
case, the relationship between the two entities render
them to be of
no significance. In my view, the evidence viewed in its
totality proves on the balance of probabilities that
E Mart leased
the premises from the plaintiff and it paid or was liable to pay rent
to the plaintiff for the premises which is
enough to entitle it to
claim loss of rental in terms of the insurance policy from the
defendant.
[41] The
defendant relies mainly on the evidence of Maitre that the books of
account presented by the plaintiff were compiled
after the fact, were
manufactured and were a misrepresentation tantamount to fraud.
Mr Maitre’s accusation was not
put to Mansoor and to Akhtar.
They appear to be an afterthought on his part. His evidence is
in conflict with the reports
he made. It falls to be rejected
and no weight be given to it.
[42]
The plaintiff owned the premises. E Mart signage and E Mart’s
stock show that E Mart used the premises. The
use of the
property in the absence of any other reason indicates that E Mart
paid or was supposed to pay for using the premises.
The
premises were in a condition to be let and a market related rental of
R140 000.00 per month. There was during the period
in question
an exchange of money between the plaintiff and E Mart which money or
part thereof could be the rental for the premises.
The books of
account of both Sixbar and E Mart show entries that could relate to
the rental of the premises. There is a document
purporting to
be the lease agreement in terms of which E Mart leased the premises
from the plaintiff. There are VAT returns
showing that the both
the plaintiff and E Mart accounted to SARS for the VAT of rental
relating to the premises. In my view, the
plaintiff on the totality
of the evidence has proved its claim on the preponderance of
probabilities and it is entitled to judgement
as claimed in the
summons. The interest should accrue from the date the defendant
could have paid the claim relating to the
loss of rental.
[43] It
is ordered that judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff
against the defendant as follows:
1.
Payment of the sum of R1 200 000.00 (one million two hundred
thousand rand)
2.
Payment of interest on the said amount at the rate of 15.5% per annum
from 1 April 2014 to date of payment.
3.
Cost of suit including costs consequent upon employment of senior
counsel, costs of obtaining the transcripts of the evidence
and the
costs for preparation of written arguments.
___________
Mngadi,
J
APPEARANCES
Case
Number :
9855/2015
For
the Plaintiff :
F.M. Moola SC
Instructed
by
:
Omar Attorneys
DURBAN
For
the respondent :
J. Nicholson
Instructed
by
: Beaumont Incorporated
DURBAN
NORTH
Heard
on
: 12 October 2020-26
March 2021
Judgment
delivered on
:
19 APRIL 2022
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