Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 472South Africa
Concor Construction (Pty) Ltd v Old Mutual Alternative Risk Transfer Insure Ltd and Others (2025-064595) [2025] ZAGPJHC 472 (16 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Concor Construction (Pty) Ltd v Old Mutual Alternative Risk Transfer Insure Ltd and Others (2025-064595) [2025] ZAGPJHC 472 (16 May 2025)
Concor Construction (Pty) Ltd v Old Mutual Alternative Risk Transfer Insure Ltd and Others (2025-064595) [2025] ZAGPJHC 472 (16 May 2025)
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sino date 16 May 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2025-064595
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
16 May 2025
In
the matter between:
CONCOR
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
OLD
MUTUAL ALTERNATIVE RISK TRANSFER
INSURE
LTD
First Respondent
LOMBARD
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Second Respondent
OPTIPOWER
A TRADING DIVISION OF MURRAY AND
ROBERTS
LIMITED
Third Respondent
PETER
VAN DEN STEEN
N.O.
Fourth Respondent
JOSHUA
BRUCE CUNLIFFE
N.O.
Fifth Respondent
DENIS
MACHEYA CHIFUNYISE
N.O.
Sixth Respondent
WOLF
WINDFARM (RF) (PTY)
LTD
Seventh Respondent
Heard:
14 May 2025
Delivered:
16 May 2025
JUDGMENT
YACOOB,
J:
[1]
The applicant, Concor Construction (Pty)
Ltd (“Concor”), and the third respondent, Optipower
(“Optipower”)
are members of a consortium (“the
Consortium”) contracted to provide services on a windfarm
project for the seventh
respondent, Wolf Wind Farm (RF) (Pty) Ltd
(“the Employer”). Optipower is a trading division of
Murray and Roberts Limited,
which is now in business rescue. In terms
of the written Consortium Agreement, Concor bears 28,94% oof the
benefits and liabilities
of the project, while Optipower bears
71.06%, although these proportions are subject to change.
[2]
The fourth to sixth respondents are the
three business rescue practitioners of Murray and Roberts, and
therefore of Optipower. The
second respondent, Lombard Insurance
Company Limited (“Lombard”), provided a performance
guarantee to the Employer
for the full value of the project. The
first respondent, Old Mutual Alternative Risk Transfer Insure Limited
(“OMART”),
provided a guarantee to Lombard for Concor’s
propoertion of liability in the project. Due to issues arising in the
project
apparently resulting from Optipower being placed in business
rescue, the Employer has made demand of Lombard for payment, and
Lombard
consequently made demand of OMART for the portion guaranteed
by OMART.
[3]
Concor has approached this court on an
urgent basis to interdict OMART from paying Lombard, and Lombard from
making demand on OMART
in terms of the guarantee provided by OMART
for Concor’s liability in the project (the OMART guarantee)
pending the determination
of part B of this application, in which it
seeks a final determination that it and OMART are not liable in terms
of the OMART guarantee.
[4]
Concor contends that the relief it seeks is
urgent, because if the interdict is not granted, payment will be made
where there is
no liability. It contends that the demand is
fraudulent, or at least made in the knowledge that there is no
liability, because
the proportions of liability in terms of the
Consortium agreement have been changed. It contends that, should
OMART pays Lombard
pursuant to the demand, this will result in Concor
bearing liability that ought to be borne by Optipower, despite the
fact that
the liability arises from Optipower’s breach to the
Employer. Concor does not set out in any particularity, or at all,
how
the payment by OMART in terms of the OMART guarantee, to which
Concor is not a party, results in undue prejudice to Concor, which
cannot be remedied in due course.
[5]
Concor contends that the Consortium
agreement provides that Optipower indemnifies Concor against 100% of
liabilities, and that for
this reason, the OMART guarantee does not
have any liability to guarantee.
[6]
However, the Consortium agreement
specifically provides that if a member of the consortium bears more
than its agreed share of the
liability, that member is indemnified by
the other member. In other words, Concor is indemnified by Optipower
for any liability
it becomes responsible for beyond its agreed share.
[7]
It must be remembered that the Consortium
agreement only binds the two members of the consortium, and governs
benefits and liabilities
inter partes
.
The Consortium agreement does not affect the Employer, or either
Lombard or OMART. None of the other parties to this litigation
have
any rights under the Consortium agreement, in the same way that
Concor has no rights under the OMART guarantee.
[8]
It was argued on Concor’s behalf that
permitting OMART to pay out under the guarantee would be akin to a
situation in which
an agent obtained insurance cover for 100
vehicles, and then claimed for the loss of one of those vehicles,
when in fact at the
date of obtaining the cover, none of those
vehicles exist. This analogy must be dealt with, because in this
scenario, the person
obtaining cover for the nonexistent vehicles is
the person who must bear the consequences of their action. That
is very different,
factually, to the situation in this case.
[9]
Optipower entered business rescue on 22
November 2024. This was a default of the Consortium agreement, and
resulted in Concor becoming
the only decision making member of the
consortium. To put it in the terms of the Consortium agreement,
Concor was the only member
of the consortium to have representatives
on the Executive Committee of the consortium.
[10]
On 29 January 2025, the Executive
Committee, as it was, at least on the face of it, empowered by the
Consortium to do, determined
that Concor was indemnified by Optipower
for the purposes of this case at lease, for all liabilities. It
informed OMART of the
fact.
[11]
After this, the Lombard guarantee and the
OMART guarantee were both about to expire and were both renewed. The
OMART guarantee was
renewed too, the new guarantee being issued on 20
March 2025. Concor alleges in its founding affidavit that its
provision of the
OMART guarantee to Lombard was in accordance with
Concor’s obligation in terms of clause 4.2 of the Consortium
agreement.
[12]
Clause 4.2 of the Consortium agreement
provides that the parties intend that any bond that is drawn down by
a beneficiary of that
bond is drawn down only in proportion to the
percentage share of the consortium member who provided the bond, but
that if the bond
is drawn down disproportionate to the percentage
shares, the parties indemnify each other against the excess
liability. It does
not require a party to provide a bond, but it does
shed light on what the Consortium agreement provides regarding
liabilities borne
by the parties.
[13]
Clause 4.1 of the Consortium agreement
provides, inter alia, that “Each Party shall provide guarantee
facilities in accordance
with their respective Percentage Share”.
Clause 4.3 provides that the draw down on any bond or guarantee be in
accordance
with the Percentage Share adjusted by any amount by which
one Party indemnifies the other. Concor relies on this to contend
that
no draw down on the OMART bond is permissible. Clause 4.4
provides for a Party to remedy a breach of its obligations in terms
of
clauses 4.2 and 4.3, by providing a payment guarantee to the other
party.
[14]
Although the Executive Committee determined
in January 2025 that Optipower indemnified Concor for all amounts, it
still provided
a bond, on its own version in accordance with its
obligations in terms of the Consortium agreement, on 20 March 2025,
two months
after it alleges that the Percentage Share liability of
Concor no longer existed, for 29% of the Lombard guarantee. One
wonders
why, if it is the case that Optipower’s liability was
now 100%, and that that was binding on Lombard and OMART, Concor
procured
from OMART the 29% guarantee in favour of Lombard. In those
circumstances, at least
prima facie
,
there is no bad faith on the part of either Lombard or OMART in
drawing down and paying the 29%, whatever Concor had told them,
which
it alleges it did by February 2025, at least a month before the issue
of this guarantee. Further, there is no allegation
that OMART was
told after the guarantee was issued that it was erroneous, or that
Concor did anything to retract the guarantee.
Certainly, if the
allegation that the guarantee was provided in accordance with
Concor’s obligations in terms of the Consortium
agreement, then
it appears that at that date, which was after the decision was taken
by the Executive Committee that Optipower
indemnified Concor for 100%
of the liability, that Concor nonetheless had to provide the
guarantee for 29%.
[15]
In these circumstances, it is difficult to
see what prejudice results to Concor from the payment of the
guarantee by Lombard, let
alone that any prejudice cannot be remedied
in due course. Taken together with the fact that Concor does not
state in its founding
affidavit what prejudice results to it from the
payment by OMART to Lombard in terms of the guarantee, I cannot find
that Concor
has established that the application is urgent. And even
if it was urgent, I cannot find that Concor has established a
prima
facie
right that is at risk.
[16]
To refer back to the analogy employed by
counsel for Concor, the person who obtained the cover ostensibly
aware that there was nothing
to be covered is not, unlike in that
analogy, the person who would bear the consequences of their own
action. Concor is the person
who knew the circumstances, and obtained
the cover anyway. To say that the cover cannot be drawn down on in
those circumstances
raises a number of questions that no urgent court
can deal with appropriately.
[17]
There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result. Lombard, the only respondent that participated in
these urgent proceedings,
made use of two counsel, and considering
that Lombard was called upon to respond to a complex set of facts in
a very short period
of time, I consider that to be justified.
[18]
In the result, I order:
The application is struck
for want of urgency, with costs on scale C, including costs of two
counsel.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 16 May 2025.
APPEARANCES
For the applicant:
LJ van Tonder SC
Instructed by:
Tiefenthaler Attorneys Inc
For the first respondent
(abiding):
Moll Quibell Attorneys
For the second respondent:
L Morison SC with A Kruger
Instructed by:
Frese Gurovich Attorneys
For the third to sixth
respondents:
Webber Wentzel Attorneys
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