Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 332South Africa
Clientelle Life Assurance Company Limited v B3 Insurance Brokers (Pty) Ltd (024527/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 332 (20 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Clientelle Life Assurance Company Limited v B3 Insurance Brokers (Pty) Ltd (024527/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 332 (20 March 2025)
Clientelle Life Assurance Company Limited v B3 Insurance Brokers (Pty) Ltd (024527/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 332 (20 March 2025)
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sino date 20 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
Number:
024527/25
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED: No
DATE
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
CLIENTELE
LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Applicant
and
B
INSURANCE BROKERS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
B3
FUNERALS SOWETO (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
JUDGEMENT
MANOIM J
[1]
The applicant in this urgent applicant, Clientele Life Insurance
Company Ltd (Clientele) is an insurance underwriter.
[2]
In 2021 it was approached by the two respondents, B3 Insurance
Brokers (Pty) Ltd (B3) and B3 Funerals Soweto (Pty) Ltd (B3 Soweto)
to take over as the underwriter of their funeral underwriting
policies as they had become embroiled in a dispute with their then
underwriter a firm called African Unity Life (AUL).
[3]
Clientele agreed and once the necessary regulatory hoops had been
jumped through, it issued new policies to the clients to replace
those of AUL. At the same time, it entered into an agreement with the
respondents. The respondents are what is known as intermediaries
in
this industry. They act as the interface between the client who buys
the funeral policy and the underwriter. This requires them
to be
subject to certain regulatory requirements in terms of the Financial
and Intermediary Services Act, 37 of 2002, known as
the FAIS
requirements. They become relevant later.
[4]
In 2022 the respondents approached Clientele again. They, on
Clientele’s version not seriously disputed, were facing
financial problems because of cash flow. Clientele agreed to help out
by paying them R 100 million upfront – an advance on
the
premiums to be received.
[5]
But in return for this advance Clientele required the respondents to
agree to an amendment of their agreement. The clause which
I shall
refer to as the anti-churn clause was to protect Clientele which had
paid the respondents their commission upfront from
the risk of the
respondents migrating the policies to another underwriter.
[6]
The crucial term in the amendment is this clause 4.14.a, which
provides as follows:
·
during the
subsistence of the respective intermediary agreements, as well as
after the termination or cessation of the same, the
Respondents would
refrain from any acts and/or omissions which, directly or indirectly:
o
invite, induce or persuade,
or attempt to invite, induce or persuade any "A1 and A2.1
Policyholder" (as per Annexure A)
to cancel his/her Policy
and/or relationship with Clientele (it being agreed that Clientele
shall likewise not invite, induce or
persuade any "A1 and A2.1
Policyholder" to cancel his/her relationship with the
intermediaries); and/or
o
directly or indirectly
interfere with the insurer/insured relationship created between
Clientele and any "A1 and A2.1 Policyholder"
(as per
annexure A to the respective addenda).
[7]
In industry jargon this type of clause is known as an anti-churning
mechanism. All went well until on 5 December 2024, Hugo
Low,
Clientele’s Managing Director was shown a letter purportedly
emanating from B3. Written by its chief executive officer
Surprise
Nkosi it is dated 5 November 20249 (the November letter). It is
marked Private and Confidential but is not addressed to
anyone. It
states that a company called Gavanni Pty Ltd (Gavanni) had been
mandated by B3 to initiate “re-broking”
of B3’s
client’s policies. The letter does not specifically refer to
Clientele’s policies. But it does refer
to amongst categories
of contracts to be renegotiated were its ‘
funeral policy
portfolio’
. Clientele claims it represents 90% of B3’s
funeral policy business so this reference to the funeral policy
portfolio it
contends, must be considered a reference to its
policies. If that is the case it argues, then B3 is violating clause
4.14a, the
anti-churning provision in the contract.
[8]
Clientele wrote to B3 in December precisely making this accusation.
It demanded an undertaking that B3 would respect the anti-churning
provision. B3 through its attorney wrote back an aggressive letter.
It accused Clientele of violating the confidentiality agreement
between and being in unlawful possession of the letter. On the letter
itself B3 claimed it was an internal document that had never
gone out
to anyone. But on the material issue of the undertaking B3 refused.
[9]
Correspondence went back and forth between the parties from December
to January with a brief month’s hiatus in between
presumably
everyone was on leave for their annual vacation. Clientele
requested the undertakings again in January; they were
not
forthcoming from the respondents leading eventually to this
application being launched.
[10]
In the meantime, in December the parties agreed to take the dispute
to arbitration. The contract provides for this. The
arbitration is
well under way; papers have been filed, and an arbitrator has been
agreed upon. The parties are agreed that the
arbitration will only be
concluded in three to four months’ time. The arbitration will
decide the same issues that arise
in this interim interdict regarding
the legality of the contract.
[11]
Clientele’s case is a simple one. The contract is clear and
prohibits churning. Prima facie, the November letter,
suggests by way
of a powerful inference that can be drawn from its content, that B3
was about to churn its funeral policy portfolio
to Gavanni. But what
it relies on for the trigger for this application is the steadfast
refusal of B3 to give the undertaking.
Thus, argues Clientele it has
a contract, and it is entitled to specific performance. Where the
other party refuses to do so it
argues, it is entitled to an
interdict to compel them to do so.
[12]
If B3 does engage in churning the damage will have been done and the
harm will be irreversible save for a claim for damages
as policies
are ongoing financial instruments for which regular premiums are
paid.
[13]
B3 has opposed the interdict both on the grounds of urgency and the
merits. It has also filed a counterclaim in which
is claims return of
the November letter, its deletion from any electronic communications
devices under the applicant’s control
and striking it out from
the applicant's founding affidavit. No affidavit is attached to this
counterclaim instead the claim is
made that the facts are set out in
the answering affidavit of the respondents’ deponent.
Whether this is adequate to
enable the applicant to respond I need
not decide.
[14]
The counter claim is clearly not urgent and was brought simply as an
attempt to erect another hurdle in the way of the
applicant. If on
the same facts the respondents allege the applicant’s claim was
brought too late the same criticism can
be levelled against them with
an even stronger basis given that this demand was only made now in
the answering affidavit despite
the respondents knowing that the
applicant had the letter in their possession in early December. Nor
is there any concern of irreparable
harm. The only time the letter is
likely to be used for any purpose is in litigation, and if there is
any basis to the objection
which I need not decide now, it can be
made there and then in the appropriate forum. In fairness to Mr
Zimmerman who appeared for
the respondents he appeared to concede
this. This application must be struck from the roll.
[15]
I return to the main application. The respondent’s opposition
to the main application was based on several issues.
First the
application had not been brought timeously. Secondly the applicant
could get relief in due course because the parties
were going to have
the matters determined in the arbitration which had already been set
up. Then the respondents objected to the
joinder of B3 Soweto on the
basis that is a separate legal entity and was not mentioned in the
November letter – only B3
is.
[16]
Further the respondents also contended that the interdict was for
final relief not interim relief. But it is quite clear
that the
relief is interim, and this point was conceded by Mr Zimmerman at the
hearing.
[17]
The respondent also argued that the relief was unenforceable because
it was too vague. It was alleged that it was not
clear to which
contracts the relief applied because the individuals were not named
rather the relief was set out in general terms
by way of reference to
the erstwhile AUL clients.
[18]
The respondents also deny the applicant has established a prima facie
right. They contend that the anti-churning clause
is not enforceable
because it is contra bones mores. The reason for this contention is
that they allege is that will force them
to contravene their
professional duties as independent brokers in terms of the FAIS
regulations. They gave as an example
if an individual sought
advice as to whether the Clientele policy was the best in the market
or if they could get a policy better
suited to their needs from
another company. If the respondent company considered there were
better options open to the client,
the relief being sought would
preclude them from doing so. They note that the obligation imposed on
the intermediaries survives
even the termination of their agreement
with the applicant.
[19]
The applicant contends that the terms of the relief do not prevent
the respondents from advising the individual client.
It is aimed, it
was argued, at the wholesale churn of a book to another client as
appeared to be threatened in the November letter.
The applicant of
course was a beneficiary of such a wholesale churn when it took over
the AUL policies and no doubt given this
history is extremely
sensitive to the same fate befalling it.
[20]
But I do not need to decide these points. The application is not
urgent. This is not because it was not brought in time.
Here I am
with the applicant. It attempted to negotiate with the respondents
before resorting to litigation and once this avenue
was closed by the
respondent’s refusal to give an undertaking not to churn, the
applicant brough the application timeously.
But the problem for the
applicant is showing it will not be able to get relief in due course.
This is the other requirement of
Rule 6(12(b).
[21]
It is common cause that the arbitration process will take place in
the next three to four months. The respondents consider
themselves
bound if not by the anti-churning provision at least by the
obligation for Clientele to be given 90 days’ notice
of a
client’s instruction to change or cancel its policy. This
understanding even appears in the contentious November letter.
[22]
Thus argue the respondents the apprehended harm is not immediate. I
agree with this contention. Moreover, the immediate
concern of the
applicant at the time the application was launched was the looming
spectre of the respondents churning their policies
to Gavanni. But
the Gavanni deal whatever it entailed (and this point is disputed) is
now according to the respondents no longer
going to happen. The
applicant is not able to refute this so I must accept this.
[23]
If the applicant is correct in its legal contentions it will succeed
in the arbitration in at most four months’
time. The question
then is whether it should get interim relief to safeguard its
interests until then. The respondents have indicated
that they at
least respect the 90-day notice period. That leaves possibly one
month when a churn may take place. But the immediate
threat of that
when this application was brought was the threat of Gavanni. But that
threat is no more. I consider that the
applicant will still be
able to get substantial relief in due course. Given the nature of the
legal dispute between the parties
which is by no means simple, it is
better that the points of law at issue are decided in the course of
an arbitration than in the
urgent court.
Conclusion
[24]
The main application is struck off the roll for lack of urgency. The
counter application is struck off the roll for lack
of urgency. I do
not think it fair for the taxing master to have to deal with disputes
over which attendances were necessary for
which application. One
solution is that each side pays its own costs. But the main
application raised more issues and effort than
did the
counter-application. As a solution I will make no order for
costs in respect of the counter-application but reduce
the costs the
respondents can recover by half in the main application. In terms of
the agreement between the parties if there were
legal disputes
between them costs would be awarded on an attorney client scale. I
must follow their agreement and award attorney
client costs.
ORDER
1.
The main application is struck off on the grounds of urgency.
2.
The counter application is struck off on the grounds of urgency.
3.
The applicant is liable for half the respondent’s costs in
respect of the main application on an attorney client
scale.
4.
There is no award of costs in respect of the counter-application.
MANOIM J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicant: D. Van Niekerk
instructed by Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc
For the First Respondent: R. Zimerman
instructed by Taitz & Skikne Attorneys
Date of hearing: 12 March 2025
Date
of Judgement: 20 March 2025
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