Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 48South Africa
Korea Shipping Corporation and Another v South African Weather Service (AR83/2020) [2022] ZAKZDHC 48 (11 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Korea Shipping Corporation and Another v South African Weather Service (AR83/2020) [2022] ZAKZDHC 48 (11 November 2022)
Korea Shipping Corporation and Another v South African Weather Service (AR83/2020) [2022] ZAKZDHC 48 (11 November 2022)
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sino date 11 November 2022
FLYNOTES:
CLAIM AGAINST WEATHER SERVICE
Maritime
law – Claim against South African Weather Service –
Based on failure to issue severe weather warning
– Losses
from ship breaking free from moorings – Notice required to
organ of State – Weather service not
“organ of State”
in Act – Excluded from operation of notice requirement –
Legal Proceedings Against
Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NAT
AL LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
(EXERCISING
ITS ADMIRALTY JURISDICTION)
Case
No: AR 83/2020
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between:
KOREA
SHIPPING CORPORATION
FIRST PLAINTIFF
KOREA
TONNAGE NO 27 SHIPPING COMPANY SECOND PLAINTIFF
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN WEATHER SERVICE
DEFENDANT
ORDER
It
is ordered:
The
exceptions raised by the defendant in its notice of exception in
terms of Admiralty Rule 9(5) dated June 2021, are dismissed
with
costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Khan
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
In this case, the first plaintiff is
Korea Shipping Corporation, a company duly incorporated
in
accordance
with
the
company
laws
of
South
Korea, which
conducts business at 25
Gukjegeumyung-ro-2-gil, Yeongdeungpogu, Seoul, South Korea, as the
Bareboat Charterer of the mv
"SM
New York"
("the Vessel").
The second plaintiff is Korea Tonnage
NO
27 Shipping Company, a company
duly
incorporated
and registered
with limited liability in accordance
with the company laws of South Korea, and the owner of the Vessel,
which conducts business
from the same address
as the first plaintiff.
[2]
The first
and second
plaintiffs
sued
the
defendant, the South· African
Weather Service, which
is
a juristic person established
under
the
South
African
Weather
Service
Act 8 of 2001 ("SAWS Act"),
with its principal place of business at King Shaka International
Weather Office, King Shaka International
Airport, La Mercy, KwaZulu-Natal, for
the payment of
the
sums
of
Korean
Won
235 284 691
and
US
Dollars
129
815.8;
mora
interest
and costs.
Plaintiffs'
claim
[3]
In their particulars of claim, the
plaintiffs allege that on 10
th
October 2017, and in consequence of the then prevailing severe
weather conditions, the Vessel broke free of her mooring at her
berth
at the Container Terminal in the Port of Durban. At approximately
the same time, the mv
"MSC
Ines"
also broke free of her
mooring and collided
with
the Vessel. The amount claimed is for damages
which the plaintiffs
allegedly suffered as a result of that
collision.
[4]
The plaintiffs' claims are founded on the alleged breach of the
defendant's statutory duties to provide "public
good services"
to all South Africans as defined in schedule 1 of the SAWS Act. They
allege that this includes the obligation
to:
(a)
warn
ships
of
gales,
storms
and
tropical
storms, inter
alia,
by
the issue
of
radio
messages;
(b)
issue
weather
bulletins
suitable
for
shipping,
containing
data
of
existing
weather,
waves, ice and forecast;
(c)
provide weather and climatic forecasting
and warning services intended for the general benefit of the
population and the safety
of life and property;
(d)
provide meteorological support for
aviation and maritime search and rescue activities in accordance with
international obligations
of the Government; and
(e)
issue "severe weather warnings"
in respect of "severe weather" over South Africa. "Severe
weather"
is defined in the Act as 'an extreme meteorological
event or phenomenon, which represents a real hazard to human life or
property
and has the potential to cause damage, serious social
disruption, loss of human life, or economic loss', and "severe
weather
warning" is defined as 'an alert issued by the
[defendant] with regard to severe weather
which includes an advisory, watch or
warning alert'.
[5]
The plaintiffs
allege in
their particulars
of claim
that
in
addition
to
such statutory duties, the defendant owed them a duty of care which
arose both from such statutory duties and from the following:
(a)
the
defendant
was
the
only
entity
authorised
to
issue
severe
weather-related warnings over South
Africa and the plaintiffs were obliged to rely on it for such
warnings;
(b)
in order for such severe warnings to be
effective, it is necessary that the defendant issues same as soon as
reasonably possible,
having regard to the reasonable likelihood of
the occurrence of severe weather; and
(c)
the plaintiffs and other owners and
operators of ships rely on such timeous notice to enable them to take
steps to prevent or minimise
the risk of damage to their property
during a severe weather event, which includes but is not limited to:
(i)
ensuring that the mooring lines which
keep ships moore in the Port are adequate in type and number to
ensure that ships remain safely
moored;
(ii)
ships
having
sufficient
time
to
start
their
engines
and
ensure
that
they
have
the means of self-propulsion and adequate self-navigation to exit the
Port in advance of a severe weather event at the Port;
and
(iii)
ships
having
sufficient
time
to
call
upon
the
assistance
of.tugs,
pilot
boats, radio services, and other
facilities and services at the Port.
[6]
The defendant, so the plaintiffs allege in their particulars of
claim, and/or its
employees and/or its officials acting within the
course and scope of their employment, wrongfully and negligently
breached its
duties by failing to:
(a)
employ
or
retain the services
of
suitably qualified
and/or
trained weather
specialists
for the analysis and interpretation of weather data so as to forecast
severe weather conditions and issue severe weather
warnings;
(b)
keep and maintain equipment and
infrastructure necessary to capture, analyse and interpret weather
data so as to forecast severe
weather conditions;
(c)
properly analyse and interpret the
weather data available to it on 8th
and
9th
October
2017, which weather data indicated that severe weather conditions
were likely to be experienced along the Kwazulu-Natal
coastline
(including the locality of the Port) during the course of the morning
of 10th
October
2017 as a consequence
of
a cut-off low pressure system;
(d)
forecast
that
there
was
a
reasonable
likelihood
of
severe
weather
conditions
at
the
Port during the morning
of
10th
October
2017; and
(e)
timeously issue a severe weather warning
in advance of the severe weather
conditions experienced at the Port
during the morning
of
10th
October
2017.
[7]
The plaintiffs allege further that but
for the defendant's negligence:
(a)
the
plaintiffs
would
have
been
notified
in
advance
of the
severe
weather
conditions on 1Oth
October 2017;
(b)
the plaintiffs would
have been
able to
take adequate
steps in advance
of the severe weather conditions
reaching the Port;
(c)
the Vessel would not have broken free
from her mooring; and
(d)
the plaintiffs would not have suffered
damages.
[8]
The
plaintiffs
also
allege
that
their
claim
is
a
maritime
claim
as
defined
in
the Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation
Act 105 of 1983 and that this court has jurisdiction to hear such
action in terms of s 2(1)
of such Act.
The
exceptions
[9]
The defendant
excepted to
the
plaintiffs' particulars
of claim
on
the ground
that
it lacks
averments
which
are
necessary
to sustain
a cause
of
action
in
terms
of
Admiralty Rule 9(5).
[10]
In its notice of exception, the defendant claims that it:
(a)
is
a
s
3(a)
public
entity
under
the
Ministry
of
Environmental
Affairs
and
is
governed
by a Board;
(b)
became a public entity on 15th
July 2001, in terms of the SAWS Act, as
amended in 2013;
(c)
is an authoritative voice for weather
and climate forecasting in South Africa and, as a member of the World
Meteorological Organisation,
it complies·with international
meteorological
standards;
(d)
is designated by the State as an
Aviation Meteorological Authority to provide weather services to the
aviation industry, marine
and a range of other identified clients and
to fulfil a range of international obligations of the Government; and
(e)
is thus an organ of State and creature
of statute that performs its functions and powers in terms of
enabling statutes.
[11]
It
argues,
therefore,
that
the
plaintiffs'
claim
against
it
is
subject
to
the
notice requirements
in the Institution
of Legal Proceedings
Against Certain Organs of State Act 40
of 2002 ("Act 40 of 2002"), and raises as its first
exception the argument that
not only have the plaintiffs failed to
give
such
notice to it, but they have also not sought condonation
for their failure to do so.
[12]
The
second
exception
it
raises
is
that
there
is
no
duty
of
care
owed
by
it
to
the plaintiffs in that the plaintiffs'
claim against it is a delictual claim for pure economic loss and the
law confers an
immunity
from claims for negligence in
respect
of
decisions
and/or
actions taken or not taken by the defendant in the exercise of its
statutory powers or performance of its statutory duties.
It claims
that it cannot be held liable for the alleged negligent
failure
to
perform
its
statutory
duties
in
the
absence
of
mala
fides,
which
the.
plaintiffs do not allege.
[13]
The defendant
also
argues
that
the
plaintiffs
failed
to
plead
facts
which
demonstrate that the defendant
owed
them
a legal duty. It avers that the case
pleaded by the plaintiffs consists in legal conclusions, inferences
and/or deductions sought
to be drawn by the plaintiffs from the
statutory duty which they claim the defendant
owes to them and others.
[14]
The defendant also claims that our law
requires that wrongfulness be positively established in claims for
pure economic loss. As
its third exception, it claims that even if
the allegations
of
fact in the particulars
of claim made
against
it
are assumed
to
be
true, they are not susceptible in law of
sustaining a finding that the defendant was a legal cause of the
plaintiffs' losses ie.
there is no causal relationship in law between
the defendant's alleged wrongful acts and the plaintiffs' losses. The
defendant
argues that its. alleged wrongful conduct and the
plaintiffs' losses are not reasonably connected and are too remote to
give rise
to delictual liability.
Response
to the first exception
[15]
An "organ of State" is defined
in Act 40 of 2002 as follows:
'(a)
any
national
or
provincial or local department;
(b)
a
municipality contemplated in section 151
of the Constitution;
(c)
any
functionary
or institution exercising
a power
or
performing
a
function in terms
of
the Constitution, or a provincial constitution referred to in section
142 of the Constitution;
(d)
the South African Maritime Safety
Authority
established
by section 2 of the South African
Maritime Safety Authority Act, 1998 (Act 5 of 1998);
(e)
The South African National Roads Agency
Limited contemplated in section 3 of The South African National Roads
Agency Limited and
National Roads Act, 1998 (Act 7 of 1998);
(f)
National Ports Authority
Limited, contemplated in section
4
of the
National Ports Act, 2005
and
any entity deemed to be the National Ports Authority in
terms of
section 3
of that Act;
(g)
any person for whose debt an organ
of state contemplated in
paragraphs
(a)
to
(f)
is
liable;'
[16]
It is axiomatic that for the exception
grounded on the plaintiffs' alleged non compliance with the
provisions of Act 40 of
2002 to succeed, I must find that the
defendant falls within the definiti n of the words "organ of
State" as contained
in that Act. Mr
Mokoena
SC, for the defendant, argued that
the defendant falls within the ambit of subsection
(c)
of that definition viz. 'any
functionary or institution exercising a power or performing a
function in terms of the Constitution,
or a provincial constitution
referred to in section 142 of the Constitution', just as it falls
within the definition of those words
under the Constitution and the
Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 (as amended) ("the
PFMA").
[17]
I am not persuaded by Mr
Mokoena's
argument that because the defendant
falls within the definition of an organ of State under the
Constitution and the PFMA, that it
falls within the meaning of organ
of State under Act 40 of 2002. I referred him to the case of
Haigh
v Transnet Ltd
2012 (1) SA 623
(NCK), particularly paras 23 and 24, on which the plaintiffs place
some reliance and, in which Olivier J held that the legislature
quite
clearly chose to limit the group of functionaries to which Act 40 of
2002 would apply. The use of the word "Certain"
in the
title of the Act verifies this. Mr
Mokoena's
argument that
Haigh
is distinguishable
from
this
case
does
not,
unfortunately
for
the
defendant,
apply
to
the principles governing the issue of
whether SAWS qualifies as an organ of State.
[18]
That Act came into being long after
the commencement
of the Constitution and the legislature
must be deemed to have been aware of the wider definition of the term
"organ of State"
in
the Constitution
when
it
enacted
Act 40 of
2002, Olivier
J
said.
What
should
also be kept in mind was that the
legislature quite clearly intended to exclude
some organs of State from the operation
of Act 40 of 2002.
[19]
In short, had the legislature intended
the defendant
to
be regarded
as
an organ
of
State within the meaning
of
Act 40 of 2002, it would have provided for this in the SAWS Act and
if not
there,
then
in
Act
40
of
2002.
It
did
not
do
so
and
therefore
it
intended
the defendant
to be excluded from the operation
of, inter alia,
the notice
provisions contained
in Act 40 of 2002. This is in consonance
with Oliver J's dictum in
Haigh
supra. The argument of Mr
Irish
SC, for the plaintiffs, that the
SAWS Act classification of the defendant as a juristic entity in the
context of other State departments
not being so classified, advanced
in support of the plaintiffs' case that the defendant does not fall
within the definition of
organ of State, fortifies this conclusion.
Response
to the sec nd exception
[20]
The second exception is founded on the alleged absence of any duty of
care by the defendant towards
the plaintiffs. The critical question,
so the defendant argues, is whether the considerations of public and
legal policy dictate
that the defendant be held liable to the
plaintiffs for its alleged negligent failure to perform its statutory
functions by issuing
a severe weather warning in terms of the SAWS
Act. The defendant argues that even if the allegations of negligence
pleaded by the
plaintiffs are found to be correct factually, the
defendant would still not be liable to the plaintiffs as the alleged
negligent
conduct was not wrongful and therefore cannot give rise to
delictual liability on its part.
[21]
It
also
relies
on
the
immunity
embodied
in
s
27
of
the
SAWS
Act,
which
it
claims exempts it from claims for
negligence in respect of decisions and/or actions taken or not
taken by it in the exercise of its
statutory powers or performance
of
statutory duties.
[22]
The
plaintiffs'
response
to
this is
that the
defendant's
argument
based
on
s 27(1)
is
misconceived in that their pleaded case is that the defendant failed
to transmit a severe weather warning when it should have
done so ie.
an omission and not a commission,
whereas the immunity from liability is
for an act perpetrated ie. a commission. Furthermore, that the s 27
provision, like equivalent
statutory provisions, introduces a ground
for justification or a defence for conduct which is otherwise
wrongful and that it does
not extinguish
a cause of action. Any party claiming
immunity, they argue, bears the onus to plead and prove
such defence and that it is not possible
to determine
whether
such defence is available to the defendant
without reference to pleadings and
evidence.
[23]
In
Minister
of Water and Environmental Affairs and another v Really Useful
Investments 219 (Pty) Ltd and another
2017
(1) SA 505
(SCA) paras 43 and 45, to which I was referred by the
plaintiffs' counsel, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that an
analogous provision
viz. 'no person, including the state, shall be
liable in respect of anything done in good faith in the exercise of a
power or the
performance of a duty conferred or imposed in terms
of the Act', can only be
relied on where the power in question
was exercised
or
the duty performed in good faith and without negligence.
[24]
I agree with the argument advanced by
the plaintiffs on the authority of the
Children's
Resource Centre Trust and others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and others
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA) para 37, that
where a novel legal duty is asserted:
'...its
existence...depends on the facts of the case and a range of policy
issues. The need for the court to be fully informed in
regard to the
policy elements of the enquiry militates against that decision being
taken without evidence.'
[25]
The issue of remoteness likewise falls
into the same category and it entails determination of, inter alia,
foreseeability and reasonableness,
which necessitate the assessment
of evidence to determine as to whether the imposition of liability is
appropriate. These are not
issues that can properly be determined by
way of exception.
[26]
I
am
not
persuaded
that
the
plaintiffs'
particulars
of
claim
is
excipiable.
A
plain
reading
of
the
plaintiffs'
particulars
of
claim
does
not
evoke
the
perception
that
it
lacks averments which are necessary to
sustain a cause of action.
[27]
In
Southernport
Developments
(Pty)
Ltd
Tsogo Sun Ebhayi
(Pty) Ltd v Transnet
Ltd
2003
(5) SA 665
0/V) para 6, the court formulated the test on exceptions
as follows:
'(i)
In
order
for
an
exception
to
succeed,
the
excipient
must
establish
that
the
pleading
is
excipiable on every interpretation
that
can reasonably
be
attached to it. ..
(ii)
A
charitable test is used on exception,
especially in deciding whether a cause of action is established,
and the pleader is entitled to a
benevolent interpretation...
(iii)
The Court should not look at a pleading
"with a magnifying glass of too high
power".
(iv)
The pleadings must be read as a whole;
no paragraph can be read in isolation.'
[28]
Although the court properly formulated
the test for exceptions, it appears not to have applied it the way it
should have as its
upholding·of the exception was overturned
by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
•
It
is
trite
that
the
excipient
has to satisfy
the court
that
it
would be
seriously prejudiced should the
exception not be upheld. Mr
Mokoena's
argument that the defendant will be
severely prejudiced should its exceptions be
dismissed
as it will then be
constrained to
argue
its
defences, it
expects
successfully, at trial but
at
substantial
costs
to
itself
and
this
would
be
avoided
should
the
exceptions
be
upheld,
is
not
persuasi e.
It
fails
to
take
account of the right of the plaintiffs to the
audi
alteram partem
principle of our law.
They too are entitled to access
to
a
fair
hearing and a proper
ventilation
of their claims and they too will incur
costs pursuant
thereto. Such are the vagaries
of
litigation
and ultimately
"the winner will take all".
[29]
In
Jugwanth
v
MTN
(Case
no
529/2020)
[2021]
ZASCA
114
(9
September
2021) para 3, the Supreme Court of
Appeal said:
'The
approach to an exception that a pleading does not disclose a cause of
action was reiterated by Marais JA in
Vermeulen v
Goose
Valley
Investments (Pty) Ltd
[[2001]
3 All SA 350
(A) para 7]:
"It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it be shown
that
ex
facie
the allegations made by a plaintiff and any document upon
which his or her cause of action may be based, the claim
is
(not
may be) bad in law."
An
exception sets out why the excipient says that the facts pleaded by a
plai tiff are insufficient. Only if the facts pleaded by
a plaintiff
could not, on any basis, as a matter of law, result in a judgment
being granted against the cited defendant, can an
exception succeed.
Only those facts alleged in the particulars of claim and any other
facts agreed to by the parties can be taken
into account.' (Footnote
omitted.)
[30]
In
Cook
v Gill
L.R., 8 CP 107
, referred to
with approval by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
McKenzie
v Farmers Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922
AD 16
at 23, it was held that a cause of action is disclosed when the
pleading contains:
'[E]very
fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right to the judgment
of the
Court. It does not comprise every piece of evidence which is
necessary to prove each fact, but every fact which is necessary
to be
proved.'
[32]
Save for the first ground of exception, I do not intend to, nor do I
believe I have pronounced
on the merits of the claims which form the
subject matter of the remaining grounds of exception.
Order
[33)
Consequently, the following order shall
issue:
The
exceptions raised by the defendant in its notice of exception in
terms of Admiralty Rule 9(5) dated June 2021, are dismissed
with
costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
Khan
AJ
Counsel
for the Plaintiffs
MR IRISH SC and MR KELLY
CHAMBERS,
CAPE TOWN
Plaintiffs'
Attorneys
EDWARD NATHAN SONNENBERG per
TONY
NORTON
1
RICHEFOND CIRCLE,
RIDGESIDE
OFFICE PARK
UMHLANGA
Counsel
for the Defendant
MR MOKOENA SC and
MR
SCOTT
Defendant's
Attorneys
SANQELA ATTORNEYS
c/o
POSWA INCORPORATED
SUITE
607, 6TH FLOOR
STRAUSS
DALY BUILDING
41
RICHEFOND CIRCLE,
RIDGESIDE
OFFICE PARK
UMHLANGA
Date
of hearing
21st October 2022
Date
of judgment
11th NOVEMBER 2022
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