Case Law[2023] ZASCA 152South Africa
King Price Insurance Company Limited v Mhlongo (1016/2022) [2023] ZASCA 152 (15 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – claim under insurance policy arising from motor vehicle collision – market value pleaded – evidence led on shortfall of amount owed to the financier – no evidence led on market value – incongruity between pleadings and evidence – claim not proved.
Judgment
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## King Price Insurance Company Limited v Mhlongo (1016/2022) [2023] ZASCA 152 (15 November 2023)
King Price Insurance Company Limited v Mhlongo (1016/2022) [2023] ZASCA 152 (15 November 2023)
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sino date 15 November 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 1016/22
In
the matter between:
KING
PRICE INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
SIZWE
ANTONIO MHLONGO
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
King Price Insurance Company Limited v Mhlongo
(Case no 1016/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 152
(15 November 2023)
Coram:
GORVEN, MABINDLA-BOQWANA and WEINER JJA and BINNS-WARD and KEIGHTLEY
AJJA
Heard
:
6 November 2023
Delivered
:
15 November 2023
Summary:
Civil procedure – claim under insurance policy arising from
motor vehicle collision – market value pleaded –
evidence
led on shortfall of amount owed to the financier – no evidence
led on market value – incongruity between pleadings
and
evidence – claim not proved.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Phooko
AJ with Khumalo J concurring, sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria is set
aside and is substituted
by the following order:
‘
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Regional Court for the Regional Division of Gauteng,
Pretoria is set
aside and is substituted by an order granting
absolution from the instance with costs.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Keightley
AJA (Gorven, Mabindla-Boqwana and Weiner JJA and Binns-Ward AJA
concurring)
[1]
The respondent
in this appeal, Mr Mhlongo, was a policy holder with the appellant,
King Price Insurance Company Ltd (King Price).
The policy was for
comprehensive cover for his Mercedes Benz E200 motor vehicle. In
2018, Mr Mhlongo’s vehicle was involved
in a collision,
and as a result, it was written off. He duly lodged a claim under his
policy with King Price. However, King Price
rejected the claim and
cancelled the policy.
[2]
Mr Mhlongo
then issued summons out of the regional court, Pretoria (the trial
court), averring a breach of the agreement by King
Price. He claimed
contractual damages in the amount of R374 960.50 being ‘the
fair, alternatively reasonable, alternatively
market related value of
the motor vehicle’ (the market-related value). In response,
King Price pleaded that Mr Mhlongo had
failed to comply with his
obligations under the agreement. He was thus not entitled to
indemnity, and King Price was entitled to
avoid the agreement of
insurance.
[3]
The parties
did not seek to separate issues in the matter, proceeding on both
merits and quantum. Much of the trial focused on whether
King Price
was entitled to avoid the agreement. The only evidence adduced by Mr
Mhlongo to establish the quantum of the damages
he claimed to have
suffered was a written settlement quotation, supposedly from Standard
Bank which had financed the purchase of
the vehicle, stating that the
settlement amount due to the bank under the vehicle finance agreement
was R374 960.50.
[4]
The trial
court found in Mr Mhlongo’s favour. It awarded damages in the
amount pleaded. The matter went on appeal to a full
bench of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the full bench), which
upheld the trial court’s judgment and order.
On petition to
this Court, leave to appeal was granted, although it was limited to
‘[w]hether the respondent (Plaintiff)
proved the quantum of the
claim’.
[5]
The nub of
King Price’s case on appeal is that the evidence adduced by
Mr Mhlongo did not support his pleaded case on
quantum. As noted
above, he claimed as damages the market-related value of his vehicle.
He confirmed that this was the basis of
his claim in
cross-examination. Yet he presented no evidence at all on the market
value of the vehicle. King Price pointed out
that Mr Mhlongo conceded
under cross-examination that he had no knowledge of its market value.
According to King Price, Mr Mhlongo’s
reliance on the
settlement amount due to Standard Bank was misplaced, as it bore no
relation to the case as pleaded. In the absence
of evidence which
established the pleaded quantum of his claim, King Price contended
that the claim ought to have been dismissed
by the trial court, and
the full bench ought to have upheld its appeal.
[6]
The full bench
dismissed King Price’s appeal on two bases. First, it found
that, correctly interpreted, the agreement between
the parties
obliged King Price to pay the settlement amount, and hence Mr Mhlongo
was entitled to claim that amount by way of contractual
damages.
Second, it found that the onus lay on King Price to plead and prove
an alternative basis for the calculation of damages,
and it had
failed to do so.
[7]
The full bench
erred in respect of the first basis for dismissing the appeal. What
was fundamentally at issue was not the correct
interpretation of the
agreement, but rather the case as pleaded by Mr Mhlongo. He pleaded
his damages based on the market-related
value of the vehicle. He did
not plead damages based on the settlement amount (nor, incidentally,
did he even prove that amount
adequately). It was thus irrelevant to
Mr Mhlongo’s case whether, on a particular interpretation of
the agreement, King Price
was obliged to pay the settlement amount:
this was simply not the case that Mr Mhlongo pleaded, or King Price
was asked to meet.
Consequently, the full bench ought not to have
dismissed the appeal on this basis.
[8]
As to the
second basis for dismissing King Price’s appeal, here too, the
full bench erred. It is trite that it is for a plaintiff
to prove its
damages. Having appropriately elected to frame his damages as the
market-related value of the vehicle, Mr Mhlongo
bore the onus of
proving the damages so pleaded. King Price elected to defend the
action on the basis that Mr Mhlongo had not discharged
his onus. King
Price was entitled to defend the action in this manner. As such,
there was no duty on King Price to plead or present
evidence to prove
an alternative quantum of damages, as the full bench suggested. When
Mr Mhlongo failed to prove his pleaded damages,
that should have been
the end of the matter.
[9]
Unfortunately
for Mr Mhlongo, there was a fatal incongruity between the case he
pleaded and the case he presented to the trial court.
In the absence
of evidence to establish the market-related value of his vehicle, it
could not properly be found that he had proved
his claim. The claim
ought to have failed for this reason. It follows that the appeal must
succeed.
[10]
In the result
the following order issues:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria is set
aside and is substituted
by the following order:
‘
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Regional Court for the Regional Division of Gauteng,
Pretoria is set
aside and is substituted by an order granting
absolution from the instance with costs.’
____________________
R
M KEIGHTLEY
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
C Richard
Instructed
by:
Weavind &
Weavind Inc, Pretoria
Matsepes
Inc, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
S Mahabeer SC
Instructed
by:
Mahomed Salek
Inc, Durban
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
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