Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 442South Africa
National Credit Regulator v JDG Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (A3086/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 442 (7 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 July 2019
Headnotes
– National Credit Act 34 of 2005, s 106(2).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## National Credit Regulator v JDG Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (A3086/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 442 (7 May 2025)
National Credit Regulator v JDG Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (A3086/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 442 (7 May 2025)
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sino date 7 May 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONSUMER
– Credit insurance –
Unreasonable
cover –
Unfairness
and discriminatory practises – Offered and sold credit
insurance as a bundle to people who will never benefit
from cover
– They will never claim for disability being already
disabled or for retrenchment cover since they are no
longer
employed – Policy’s structure was fundamentally
unreasonable – Unfairly disadvantaged vulnerable
consumers –
Insurance cover that goes beyond common sense – Appeal
upheld –
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
,
s 106(2).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A3086//2019
NCT
Case No:
NCT/29052/2015/140(1)(P)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
7
May 2025
Date
S. Mahomed
In
the matter between:
THE
NATIONAL CREDIT REGULATOR
Appellant
and
JDG
TRADING (PTY) LTD
1
st
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL CONSUMER TRIBUNAL
2
nd
Respondent
THE
BLACK SASH TRUST
Amicus Curiae
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
This judgment is issued by the Judges whose names
are reflected herein and is submitted electronically to the
parties/their legal
representatives by email. The judgment is further
uploaded to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines by the
Judge’s
secretary. The date of the judgment is deemed to be 7
May 2025.
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
MAHOMED J et MANAMELA AJ
1.
The appellant, the National Credit Regulator, (“the Regulator”)
appeals the whole of the judgment and the order
of the second
respondent, the National Consumer Tribunal, (“the Tribunal”),
which was handed down on 8 July 2019. The
appeal is brought in terms
of section 148 of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (“the
Act”). The Tribunal has elected
not to participate in this
appeal. No leave is required for this appeal as section 148 (1) (c)
of the Act provides for an automatic
right of appeal in respect of a
decision of the Tribunal.
2.
The first respondent, JDG Trading (Pty) Ltd ( “JDG” ), a
credit lender, offers credit inter alia, for household
goods and
furniture, which consumers purchase at retail stores. Upon an
application for credit the consumer is required to purchase
credit
insurance for the loans advanced. A consumer has a choice to either
purchase the insurance that JDG Trading offers, or he/she
may obtain
and provide his/her own insurance. JDG offers credit life insurance
which includes cover for disability and retrenchment
in a bundled
form. It is not disputed that it sold this form of cover to
pensioners, disabled persons and consumers receiving
social grants,
who were already disabled or unemployed when they signed up for the
credit. Advocate PL Carstensen SC on behalf
of the Regulator
submitted that JDG offered and sold credit insurance as a bundle to
people who will never benefit from the cover,
as they will never
claim for disability being already disabled or for retrenchment cover
since they are no longer employed. Therefore,
it was contended that
albeit allegedly cheap, the selling of such an insurance cover
contravenes the provisions of s 106(2) (a)
and (b) of the Act, in
that it is unreasonable, or its cost is unreasonable having regard to
the “actual risk and liabilities
involved in the credit
agreement”. Counsel proffered that JDG is in terms of
section 106(1) of the Act is permitted
to offer cover, however the
cover does not comply with section 106(2) of the Act.
3.
The Issue
The
issue before this court is whether JDG Trading has contravened
sections 106(2), 90(1) and (2), 91(1) and (2) of the Act. It
was
submitted that if this court agrees with the Regulator on a
contravention of section 106 (2) (a) or (b), it follows then that
the
remainder of the sections have been contravened.
4.
The Relief Sought
The
appellant seeks that:
“
2.1
the
appeal be upheld;
2.2
the appellant be granted relief sought in prayer 2(a) and 2(b) of the
NCR Form 32, dated 6 August 2015
as follows:
2.2.1 it
is declared that the first respondent has repeatedly contravened
sections 90(1), 90(2)(a)(ii), 91(1), 101 (1)(A)
106(2)(a) and (b) of
the Act;
2.2.2 it
is declared that the first respondent’s repeated contravention
of the aforesaid sections constitutes
conduct prohibited by the Act;
and
2.2.3 that
the determination of the appropriate administrative penalty and the
relief sought in terms of prayers 2 (c
) and (e) of the NCR form 32,
dated 6 August 2015, be referred to the Tribunal for hearing and
adjudication.
”
5.
The Black Sash Trust (“BST”) has been permitted to join
the appeal hearing, as amicus, in terms of a judgment
by Mia J, dated
20 April 2021. The BST contended that the matter raises important
constitutional issues concerning the right of
access to social
security and social assistance as guaranteed by section 27 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996 (“the
Constitution”). Advocate J Bhima appeared for the BST and
contended that there is a positive obligation
on the state to protect
social grant beneficiaries from exploitation, and a negative
obligation on corporate entities to refrain
from interfering with the
realisation of rights to social assistance, of the most vulnerable
members of society. He proffered that
his client is before this court
to demonstrate JDG’s insurance cover is meaningless for
consumers reliant on state pensions
and disability grants. JDG
strongly objected to the BST’s adducing of evidence, at an
appeal stage and argued that it has
never had an opportunity to
challenge the contents of a report by an actuary, Professor R Harris,
relied upon by the BST. Advocate
C Loxton SC, on behalf of JDG argued
very strongly, questioning both the qualifications of the expert and
the content of the report.
It was submitted that the BST had gone
beyond the duties of an amicus. He argued that the BST’s
appears to be biased and
its evidence, must be disregarded. I shall
return to this point later in the judgment.
6.
The Tribunal’s Judgment
On
8 July 2019 the Tribunal delivered its judgment, when it dismissed
the Regulator’s application to declare JDG’s credit
insurance policy as prohibited conduct. In paragraph 32 of the
judgment
[1]
, it stated:
“
[
t
]
he
Tribunal however wishes to make it clear that it cannot and will not
make a finding that bundled or group insurance is inherently
suitable
or appropriate. The Tribunal can only find that the Applicant
[the
Regulator]
was
unable to prove that the credit insurance provided was unreasonable
or provided at an unreasonable cost.”
7.
The Law
Section
106 (1) of the Act provides:
(1)
A
credit provider may require a consumer to maintain during the term of
their agreement :
(a)
credit
life insurance not exceeding, at any time during the life of th e
credit agreement, the total of the consumers outstanding
obligations
of the credit provider in terms of the agreement; and
(b)
either …
i.
…
ii.in any other case,
insurance cover against damage or loss of any property other than
property referred to in sub paragraph (i)
not exceeding, at any time
during the life of the credit agreement, the total of the consumer
outstanding obligations to the credit
provider in terms of the
agreement,”
Section 106 (2) of the
Act provides:
“
Despite
subsection (1) a credit provider must not offer or demand that the
consumer purchase or maintain insurance that is:
(a)
unreasonable; or
(b)
at an
unreasonable cost to the consumer, having regard to the actual risk
and liabilities involved in the credit agreement
.”
8.
The facts are mostly common cause between the parties. JDG did not
deny that it required credit insurance for loans advanced;
it did not
deny that the cover it sold included cover for permanent and
temporary disability, retrenchment and loss of employment,
and that
it sold this cover to consumers receiving social security grants and
unemployed consumers. Mr Carstensen SC referred the
court to the
profiles of the various consumers which the Regulator referred to as
examples and submitted that the cover was meaningless
to those
consumers. The consumers who were in the main pensioners, were never
going to benefit from the cover for retrenchment
and loss of
employment, and the consumer who is disabled, is never going to claim
in terms of the disability cover he/she paid
for in the bundle. It
was contended that the cover was unreasonable, inter alia, for this
very anomaly. JDG is at no risk
of ever having to pay for a
claim in this category and, therefore, JDG’s “low
cost and limited options for consumers
for cover” argument,
cannot be sustainable. Counsel argued that one must have regard for
the “effect or result”
of the insurance cover offered in
the bundle. The pensioner and the young consumer purchase the same
insurance, at the same price,
however the young consumer can claim
the full benefits of the cover as opposed to the pensioner or
disabled person, for whom the
retrenchment or disability cover is
meaningless. Counsel contended that the court must not lose sight of
the fact that JDG is never
at risk to pay out benefits to the
pensioner for retrenchment or to the disabled for disability cover,
as included in the bundle.
9.
Mr Carstensen SC, further, submitted that the provisions of the Act
focus on an individual consumer, not a group. The bundling
does not
provide the consumer with an option as contended by JDG, the consumer
is obliged to take the full package, including cover
for retrenchment
and disability. Counsel reminded the court that when one has regard
for the definition of e.g. retrenchment and
how one may qualify for
the benefit in the agreement, it must be unreasonable. In order
for a claim to be considered, JDG
requires the pensioner who claims
retrenchment benefits to provide a “
contract of employment,
a letter from an employer in regard to his retrenchment”.
The
consumer will never be in a position to meet the requirements, as
he/she no longer works. A disabled consumer who has a claim
must
“
produce a medical report from a doctor on the disability
and a letter from an employer that she/he is disabled
.” The
consumer is already disabled, is not employed and will never be able
to produce such a letter. The consumers were pensioners
or/ and
disabled at the date of the purchase of the insurance, their claims
will never manifest. In my view it is farcical to refer
to a claim
for such consumers.
10.
Furthermore, it was
contended that the Tribunal ought not to have distinguished the
matter of
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) and Another
[2]
(“Lewis Stores”) from the current dispute, the same
reasoning applies to this dispute. The only difference between
the
cases is that in Lewis Stores the agreements concluded were for
separate cover at specified costs, whereas in this matter the
cover
is in a bundle form and for an all-inclusive premium. Mr
Carstensen SC proffered that if the JDG cover were in
terms of
the Act, it would have been unlawful, it attempts to pass muster in
this case as part of an insurance cover. It was argued
for JDG, that
the applicant did not raise the Lewis Stores’ case before the
Tribunal and must be restricted to the record
before the appeal
court.
11.
Mr Carstensen SC proffered that the agreements set out that all
benefits paid will firstly, settle the amount outstanding
as per the
instalment agreement. JDG protects its interests and justifies
relaxation of the interests of a pensioner or disabled
persons on the
basis that the cover supports access to credit and is at a low cost.
It was submitted that although life cover may
be cheap, the pensioner
or disabled consumers do not fully benefit from the cover he/she pays
for, as other members of the
group and the agreement is
unreasonable. The bundle insurance offered, to the group
results in cross subsidisation, where
the older members subsidise
younger members of the group, who benefit more, in that the younger
members will likely require retrenchment
and disability cover in
their lifetime or work life.
12.
Mr Bhima for the Black Sash contended that a claim will never
manifest. Counsel submitted that the state has a positive
duty to
protect grant recipients to realise their rights in terms of section
27 of the Constitution and private or corporate entities
are to
refrain from interfering with the realisation of those rights
afforded in the Constitution. The BST has been involved in
matters of
social grants for decades and based on its experience, his client can
with confidence argue that JDG is involved in
predatory practice in
this matter. He rejected submissions of bias by Mr Loxton SC
and stated that his client stands by the
content of the report by
Professor Harris, and her qualifications to provide her opinion.
However he left it to the court to determine
the degree of weight to
be attached to the report.
13.
Mr Loxton SC on behalf of JDG, contended that the cover was sold in
the form of a bundle, there was only one premium which
included cover
for various risks and it was sold as group cover. This form of cover
is the only way to ensure that the price is
kept to a minimum.
Counsel argued that the consumer is given a choice to obtain his/her
own cover but will not find cover
any cheaper elsewhere. The price
promotes access to credit and can only be in the interest of the
consumer. There is no specified
price for the cover for disability,
or retrenchment, it is a comprehensive cover at a single cost.
Carstensen SC referred the court
to the record where JDG did not deny
that there was a cross subsidisation, where some in the group may
derive the full benefit
whilst others in the group may not.
However, Mr Loxton SC argued that it is the intrinsic feature of
group cover, not unusual
in the insurance industry and reiterated
that the consumer gets life cover, which would not ordinarily be
offered to pensioners
and disabled persons, and at a low cost. He
reminded the court that the insurance is convenient as JDG’s
qualification requirements,
dispenses with the delays in waiting
periods and costs for medical examinations, no medical examination is
required, which
must be seen to be in the interest of the
consumer. It was further argued that the Regulator failed
before the Tribunal because
it did not provide any comparative
evidence on cheaper products and therefor failed to demonstrate that
the bundled insurance was
unreasonable, or sold at an unreasonable
cost. In its heads of argument JDG at paragraph 2.9 refers to
paragraph 23.10 of the findings
where the Tribunal struggled to
understand why the Regulator would complain if the bundled insurance
was cheaper for the consumer
than if the consumer had to take out
separate insurance for each benefit.
14.
Furthermore, it was contended that the Regulator, only at this appeal
stage, relies on section 90(2)(ii) (a) which provides
that provision
in the credit agreement is “
unlawful if its general purpose
or effect is to deceive the consumer”
, however, it has
failed to present any evidence of deception or even that the
agreement has the potential to deceive consumers.
It was contended
that there is no evidence of a consumer who was confused or deceived
by the bundled insurance, and therefor its
argument must fail,
counsel therefor denied that there was any basis for a finding of a
violation of section 90(2) (a)(ii). It
was submitted that the
contracts were clear, the price was known, and consumers knew they
had an option to purchase their own cover.
It was common cause
that the agreements were clear in the language used and the cost was
clearly set out. The Regulator’s
argument of an unlawful
provision, is without merit.
15.
Mr Loxton SC further proffered that the Regulator’s argument is
speculative and unfounded. It was argued that both
the Regulator and
the BST are paternalistic in their approach and they presented no
evidence that credit consumers misunderstood
the scope of bundled
insurance, no evidence of confusion or deception is before the court.
He denied any violation of section 90(2)(a)(ii),
and proffered that
there was no evidence of any inducement; the insurance cover was
offered but never required to be taken up;
the consumer had a choice,
and a violation of the provisions of section 91 was also denied. The
contention was that the Regulator
again failed to provide evidence of
the mischief and the appeal stands to be dismissed.
16.
Mr Loxton SC submitted
that his client seeks costs against the BST, because it its view, the
BST had gone beyond the bounds and
purpose of an amicus, it
demonstrated a bias and cannot be seen to have assisted the court. Mr
Bhima argued that the BST’s
submissions were relevant and
necessary, the court has a discretion on the weight it would attach
to the report by Professor Harris
and the court must be guided by the
decision in
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[3]
on costs. It was accepted that the Regulator acted in good
faith and no costs would be appropriate in that instance.
Judgment
17.
The parties presented comprehensive arguments, before both the
Tribunal and this court. The focus must be on whether
the
instruments offered deliver on the desired outcomes for both the
credit lender and the credit consumer as contemplated by the
Act. The
Act’s purpose inter alia was to help draw into the economy most
consumers who for decades were excluded from full
and fair
participation in the economy of our country. An economy which
outpaced both the majority of the people of our country
as well as
the majority of our neighbours in our continent. That said, the state
within the ethos of our constitutional democracy,
identified a need
to “upgrade and align” our laws to the needs and demands
on the ground in particular, on the socio
economic challenges on the
ground. In my view the BST has been very much a part of that exercise
of “bridging the gaps”
for the very marginalised people
of our society. We noted that there was no objection to its
participation in these proceedings
only to its adducing of evidence.
18.
It is common cause that the central point in the arguments is the
provisions of section 106(2) of the Act and the
practical
effect of the application of the section to the facts.
19.
The section is couched in two separate and distinct parts and I am of
the view that the dispute can be resolved by analysis
of facts to
each of the parts. The consumer group comprised a marginalised
community of consumers, they relied on state grants
for their
existence and must be understood within their context and position in
our economy. JDG offered the access to credit,
obviously it
must look for its sustainability and adopted an accepted model of
group cover. The cover was available at the point
of sale, the
consumer had already identified his or her need, identified where and
how to purchase their goods and concluded
the agreements to
take home their purchases, to my mind, it is unlikely that he/she
would have had the time to even consider the
details of the contract
in regard to a “limited right to claim.”
20.
It is noteworthy that JDG conceded before the Tribunal that the cover
offered was designed to meet the needs of the group,
and that some in
the group would likely not benefit to the same extent as others. The
question is whether at the point of sale,
does the pensioner/
disabled person know this and regardless, agree to such an
imbalance? It is an unfairness, no matter
that the price is at
its lowest. I agree with Advocate Bhima, a claim will never manifest,
the consumer is already at the point
of purchase disabled, what in
the future would lead him to believe that he may have a claim for
disability cover and that he should
lodge a claim. Besides, to
qualify, he will have to produce a letter from his employer about his
disability, he is disabled, unemployed,
which employer does he look
to? The provision is unreasonable on the logic of the claims
process in the agreement. The claimant
in this instance is entitled
to hold a reasonable expectation that he has cover and can claim in
the event of any loss. A disabled
person who signs up for such cover,
cannot hold such expectation, and logically would not agree to pay
for such cover.
21.
Likewise, a pensioner who is now no longer employed, cannot hold an
expectation, to claim retrenchment cover, when he/she
is in fact
unemployed. The pensioner is in terms of the claims process expected
to produce a contract of employment and a letter
from his/her
employer on the circumstances of his unemployment. This surely
is unreasonable, as he no longer works. If, as
Mr Bhima for the BST
contends, the claims will never manifest, the Regulator will not be
in a position to present evidence of a
claimant who was misled,
confused, or misguided, to meet its evidentiary burden. It is
noteworthy that the Tribunal correctly
identified that the credit
grantor bears the burden to prove that the credit insurance agreement
is not unreasonable. The terms
of the agreement highlight the
unreasonableness of the agreement and therefor a violation of section
106(2)(a). On the objective
facts, the agreement violates the
provisions of the Act.
22.
When one has regard to the effect of the group cover which results in
a cross subsidisation, it is difficult to accept
that a pensioner on
a very small grant would knowingly agree to pay for a service, that
has no meaning to him, but a great deal
of meaning to a younger
consumer, whom he does not even know. I am cognisant of the accepted
practice of a wide cover, and usual
in certain insurance products,
however, in casu we are concerned with a particular kind of consumer,
and understanding this individual
consumer becomes critical.
23.
The Tribunal in its judgment appeared to have been satisfied that the
agreement promotes access to credit and is cheap,
there being no
comparative costs before it, it was unable to compare “apples
with apples”, but overlooks the net effect
of such insurance on
the rights and benefits to the unemployed and disabled compared to
other members of the group for the same
price. See paragraphs, 23.16,
28 line 22, 29 lines 7-10 and 30 of the Tribunal’s judgment.
24.
In my view, having regard to a pensioner’s claim, JDG will
never bear a risk, that has no potential to get off the
ground in the
first instance, the pensioner he would have no proof of
employment and logically no reasons for unemployment.
In my view,
JDG has a secured source of revenue, in pensioners and disabled
consumers, but carries no risk. The
revenue generated
from this group simply pays out a claim which can comply with all its
requirements, that from the younger consumer.
There can be no
fairness and ultimately reasonableness in this instance. There may be
some truth in Mr Bhima’s submissions
of predatory practices,
the cross subsidisation may assist in liquidating claims lodged by
the young consumer.
25.
In reply Carstensen SC referred the court to the submission by JDG
that the price is “generally cheap”, some
may not
benefit, which must then support the Regulator’s case for the
order sought for a declaration and a referral to the
Tribunal to
determine an appropriate penalty.
26.
In my view there is no need for this court to even consider the
price argument in terms of section 106(2) (b), save
to state that the
risks to the disabled and unemployed consumer exist, and there is no
risk to JDG. The fact that no cheaper
options are available
should not be seen as an “invitation” to relax on the
pensioner’s and disabled person’s
rights to dignity and
fair economic activity, the premiums are the same as all others in
the group they are entitled to the same
benefits as all others in the
group, the agreement to been seen as fair and within the ethos of the
Act.
27.
The Tribunal stated , “
on the face of it selling disability
and retrenchment insurance to consumers who are unemployed certainly
appears to be unreasonable.”
The Tribunal accepted the
credit provider’s case JDG, when, it did not deny that the
credit insurance was required; it did
not deny that is sold insurance
to the consumers; at the cost set out in the agreement; it did not
deny that the insurance had
no meaning for those consumers, and that
they were unable to claim for benefits. The consumer had no choice to
exclude the retrenchment
and disability covers, the fact they would
not have sourced such cover elsewhere for less makes it reasonable,
surely this
cannot be the intention of the lawmaker.
28.
To find differently, would mean that the court expects that a
pensioner, must do the impossible, find a contract of employment and
an employer who provides a reason for his unemployment, he/she
must
accept less for his/her money, and his/he consumer rights carry less
weight than those young consumers in the groups. I find
that JDG has
contravened section 106(2)(a) of the Act, the agreement is
unreasonable, it treats pensioners, and disabled persons,
unfairly
and disproportionately, it’s an insurance cover that goes
beyond common sense, in the circumstances of the pensioner
and the
disabled consumer. Although no comparative price or other option was
before the Tribunal and this court, I am of the view
it is not fatal
to the Regulator’s case, objectively viewed, the risks to each
of the parties is sufficient to demonstrate
the unfairness and
discriminatory practises that the Act seeks to eradicate. The
relief sought is therefor granted.
Costs
29.
The parties agreed that based on the nature of the dispute and the
duty of the Regulator and the amicus, each party is to pay its own
costs, which is appropriate in the circumstances.
30.
Accordingly I make the following order:
1.
The appeal is upheld;
2.
The appellant is granted the relief sought in prayer 2(a) and 2(b)
of
NCR form 32, 6 dated August 2015, as follows:
2.1
it is declared that the first respondent has repeatedly contravened
sections 90(1), 90(2)
(a) (ii), 92(1), 101 (1) (a) 106(2)(a) of the
Act;
2.2
it is declared that the first respondent’s contravention of the
aforesaid sections
constitute conduct prohibited by the Act, and
2.3
the determination of the appropriate administrative penalty and the
relief sought
in terms of prayers 2 (c ) and ( e) of the NCR
form 32, dated 6 August 2015, is referred to the Tribunal for hearing
and adjudication.
3.
Each party is to pay its own costs.
S Mahomed
Judge of the High Court
I concur
Khashane La M.
Manamela
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Date
of hearing:
6 February 2025
Date
of Judgment: 7 May 2025
Appearances:
For
appellant:
Adv PL Carstensen
SC
Instructed
by:
Ramushu Mashile
Twala, Johannesburg
For
Respondent:
Adv C Loxton SC, with him
Adv A Milovanovic-Bitter
and
Adv. M Zikalala
Instructed
by:
Werksmans,
Johannesburg
On
behalf of amicus: Advocate J
Bhima
Instructed
by:
Centre for Applied
Legal Studies, Wits
[1]
CaseLines (“CL”) 009-2215
[2]
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) and Another
NCT/27651/2015/140(1)
[2016] ZANCT 33 (9 September 2026)
[3]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
(CCT
80/08)
[2009] ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC) ;
2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC) (3 June 2009)
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