Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 234South Africa
Drakenstein Municipality v Guardrisk Allied Products and Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (2020/12145) [2025] ZAGPJHC 234 (11 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 March 2025
Headnotes
a “rejection” in the context of a time-bar clause in an insurance agreement means a “total and not partial rejection”. Its meaning cannot extend to cover the payment of part of a claim and the rejection of the rest.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Drakenstein Municipality v Guardrisk Allied Products and Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (2020/12145) [2025] ZAGPJHC 234 (11 March 2025)
Drakenstein Municipality v Guardrisk Allied Products and Services (Pty) Ltd and Another (2020/12145) [2025] ZAGPJHC 234 (11 March 2025)
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sino date 11 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
2020/12145
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
11
March 2025
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY
Plaintiff
and
GUARDRISK
ALLIED PRODUCTS
AND
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
AON
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 10 March 2025, I granted the plaintiff, Drakenstein, leave
to amend its replication in this trial action. By agreement between
the parties, I directed Drakenstein to pay the costs of the
application for leave to amend, with counsel’s costs to be
taxed
on scale “C”, and I postponed the trial action
sine
die
. I said at the time I gave my order that my reasons would
follow in due course. These are my reasons.
2
Drakenstein sues the first defendant, Guardrisk, on
Guardrisk’s repudiation of two claims under an insurance policy
taken
out on Drakenstein’s behalf by the second defendant, AON.
The second of the two claims was for fire damage to a switchgear
room
and a substation at the Parys electricity substation. Guardrisk
repudiated much of the Parys fire claim, on the basis that
the
switchgear had been underinsured, and the substation had not been
covered by the policy at all. In an unsigned “agreement
of
loss” issued to Drakenstein on 27 March 2019, Guardisk tendered
to indemnify Drakenstein for a fraction of the sum claimed
on the
policy.
3
In due course, Drakenstein sued for the full amount it said
was due to it in respect of the Parys fire. Guardrisk defended the
action.
One of Guardrisk’s pleaded defences was that the
summons commencing Drakenstein’s action had been issued more
than
twelve months from the date on which its claim had been
“rejected”, in the sense given to that word under clause
7
of the insurance Policy Wording. This meant that the claim was
time-barred.
4
In its replication, Drakenstein sought to escape the time-bar
clause by pleading five contentions, each in the alternative to the
other. It was first pleaded that Guardrisk had, contrary to Rule
17.6.3 (e) of the Policy Holder Protection Rules, 2017, made under
the Short Term Insurance Act 53 of 1998, failed timeously to inform
Drakenstein of the time-bar clause. Drakenstien says that failure
means there is good cause to condone Drakenstein’s
non-compliance with the time-bar clause under Rule 17.6.9 of the
Rules.
Second, Drakenstein alleged that, by drawing Drakenstein’s
attention only to the provisions of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
in its post-claim correspondence, Guardrisk had impliedly waived the
right to rely on the time-bar clause. Third, it was said that
Guardrisk is estopped from relying on the time-bar clause because the
reference to the
Prescription Act alone
was itself a representation
that Guardrisk did not intend to rely on the time-bar clause, and
because Drakenstein relied on that
representation reasonably and to
its detriment. Fourth, it was contended that to hold Drakenstein to
the time-bar clause would
be contrary to public policy. Fifth,
Drakenstein pleaded that its attention had not been drawn to
the time-bar clause, that
it never intended to be bound by it, and
that it is, as a result, not so bound.
5
Drakenstein later sought leave to amend its replication to add
a sixth contention. The contention was that, because Guardrisk
offered
to pay some of Drakenstein’s claim, the claim was not
in fact “rejected” within the meaning of Clause 7, and
that the time-bar clause does not apply for that additional reason.
6
Guardrisk objected to the amendment on the basis that by
offering to settle Drakenstein’s claim for less than the
amount
Drakentstein sought, Guardrisk had in fact “rejected”
the balance of the claim. There was no difference, in substance,
between the rejection of a claim under clause 7 of the Policy
Wording, and a repudiation of part of a claim. Guardrisk must simply
be taken to have rejected that part of the Parys fire claim it
repudiated. Guardrisk argued that to allow Drakenstein to plead
that
the Parys fire claim had not been “rejected” would permit
Drakenstein to contradict its earlier averment that
Guardrisk had
repudiated the bulk of the Parys fire claim. The contradiction
arises, Guardrisk says, because “rejected”
and
“repudiated” mean the same thing. To allow Drakentsein to
contradict itself in this way would render its replication
either
excipiable or vague and embarrassing.
7
The question, then, is really whether the word “rejected”
in clause 7 of the Policy Wording means only to refer to a
claim
“rejected outright” or whether it can also refer to a
claim that was partially repudiated. Mr. Fagan, who appeared
for
Drakenstein, relied upon a decision of this court in
Hurwitz’s
Trustee v Salamander Fire Insurance Company
1917 TPD 216
(“
Salamander
”). In that matter, at page 220,
Bristowe J held that a “rejection” in the context of a
time-bar clause in an
insurance agreement means a “total and
not partial rejection”. Its meaning cannot extend to cover the
payment of part
of a claim and the rejection of the rest.
8
Mr. Stockwell, who appeared for Guardrisk, pointed out that
Bristowe J had not meant his conclusion to extend to a situation in
which an insurer rejects the claim as a whole but offers a token
payment in settlement of any dispute that might arise from that
rejection. That, Mr. Stockwell contended, is what happened in this
case. The agreement of loss was really a tender to compromise.
The
claim was rejected, but a token amount was tendered to settle the
claim. Drakenstein does not accept that construction of the
agreement
of loss. It says that, at least in respect of the switchgear room,
its claim was not rejected but reduced on the basis
that the
switchgear had been underinsured.
9
At this stage, I need not take a view on that controversy. It
seems to me to be enough that there is a colourable difference of
opinion about the meaning of the agreement of loss, on which evidence
will have to be heard. Once I accept that Drakenstein’s
construction of the agreement of loss may be sustained on the
evidence, I must also accept in principle that Drakenstein may
consistently
plead that the Parys claim was partially repudiated, but
not “rejected” for the purposes of clause 7 of the Policy
Wording. Whether Drakenstein is right will depend on the meaning to
be attributed to the agreement of loss, and to clause 7 of the
Policy
Wording, in the context of the evidence as a whole. It follows that
Drakenstein’s amendment will render its replication
neither
excipiable nor vague and embarrassing.
10
I accept the possibility that, even if Drakenstein’s
construction of the agreement of loss is correct, the Policy Wording
might mean that any repudiation of any portion of a claim on the
policy is
per se
a rejection of that portion of the claim.
This would be inconsistent with what is said in
Salamander
,
but the question of whether there really is a difference between the
rejection and a partial repudiation of Drakenstein’s
claims
does not turn exclusively on that precedent. The question can in
truth be resolved only by interpreting the Policy Wording
itself –
that is, by attributing meaning to the word “rejection”
in clause 7 of the Policy Wording in the context
of the insurance
agreement as a whole and the circumstances surrounding the conclusion
of that agreement. The decision in
Salamander
is of course
material to that exercise. But the exercise cannot sensibly be
completed until evidence has been led. Until then,
Drakenstein is
perfectly entitled to contend that the “rejection” of its
claim was not synonymous with its partial
repudiation. The contention
may not survive contact with the proven facts, but that possibility
should not deprive Drakenstein
of the right to advance the contention
at trial.
11
It was for these reasons that I granted the application for
leave to amend. The parties had already agreed that, leave to amend
being an indulgence, Drakenstein should pay the costs of the
application, with counsel’s costs to be taxed on scale “C”.
It was also agreed that, in the event that the application succeeded,
the trial action would have to be postponed, with the costs
of the
postponement being reserved.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 March 2025.
HEARD
ON:
10 March 2025
DECIDED
ON:
11 March 2025
For
the Plaintiff:
E Fagan SC
A Price
Instructed by the Van der
Spuy & Partners
For
the First Defendant:
R Stockwell SC
Instructed by Clyde and
Co Attorneys
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