Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 423South Africa
Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 423 (3 May 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 423
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 423 (3 May 2024)
Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 423 (3 May 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_423.html
sino date 3 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
FLYNOTES: INSURANCE –
Business
interruption –
Covid-19
pandemic
–
Owners of shopping mall contending that they were covered for
infectious and contagious diseases (ICD) –
Several versions
of contract with ICD included and not included – Dispute
over which document was the contract –
Parol evidence rule
and integration rule – On facts of this case, no reason not
to apply integration rule – Policy
in its final form as
pleaded by plaintiffs is the contract and contained ICD cover –
Contract of insurance does not
stand to be rectified as pleaded by
insurers.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
049359/2022
1. REPORTABLE: YES/NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES/NO
3. REVISED: YES/NO
3 March 2024
In the matter between:
AZRAPART
(PTY) LTD
First Plaintiff
ACCELERATE
PROPERTY FUND LIMITED
Second Plaintiff
and
AIG
SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
First Defendant
OLD
MUTUAL INSURE LIMITED
Second Defendant
BRYTE
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Third Defendant
GUARDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Fourth Defendant
INSURANCE
UNDERWRITING MANAGERS
(PTY)
LTD
Fifth Defendant
JUDGMENT-
SEPARATED ISSUES
MANOIM J:
[1]
The plaintiffs in this matter have instituted a claim of over one
billion Rand against the five defendants, all of whom
are insurance
companies who had insured the plaintiffs in respect of various
events.
[2]
The first plaintiff is Azrapart (Pty) Ltd. The second plaintiff is
Accelerate Property Fund Limited. The plaintiffs each
own 50% of a
shopping mall known as Fourways Mall, located in Fourways, Sandton.
The plaintiffs earn their income from letting
out stores to tenants
who trade from the Mall. The relationship between the plaintiffs and
the tenants is more complex than I have
described here but that
detail is not relevant for present purposes.
[3]
In 2020, like many businesses, the lockdown caused by advent of the
Covid 19 pandemic disrupted their business. It also
disrupted the
businesses of tenants of the Mall. For reasons not relevant at
present, the plaintiffs suffered a major loss in rental
income as a
result.
[4]
In November 2022, the plaintiffs instituted the present action
against the defendants, claiming what is termed business
interruption
insurance. According to the plaintiffs the defendants had all
indemnified them (in various amounts) against business
interruption
which included inter alia loss caused by infectious and contagious
diseases. (“ICD”) for loss of rental
income from their
tenants. This case does not concern whether Covid constitutes an ICD
for which the plaintiffs could claim in
terms of their policies.
Rather the question is whether the plaintiffs were covered at all for
ICD, something the defendants all
contend that they weren’t,
whilst the plaintiffs contend to the contrary.
[5]
The reason five defendants are being sued is that they all assumed
liability to indemnify the plaintiffs for loss in various
proportions. These are:
i. AIG South Africa Limited, the
first defendant.
ii. Old Mutual Insure Limited,
the second defendant.
iii. Bryte Insurance Company
Limited, the third defendant.
iv. Guardrisk Insurance Company
Limited the fourth defendant.
v. Insurance Underwriting
Managers (Pty) Limited, the fifth defendant.
[6]
The five defendants all assumed part of the risk but in different
proportions. According to the particulars of claim these
are broken
down as follows:
a. The
first defendant: 70% of the risk;
b. The
second defendant: 14% of the risk;
c. The
third defendant: 8% of the risk; and
d. The
fourth defendant: 8% of the risk:
e.
Alternatively;
i.
fourth
defendant: 3% of the risk; and
ii.
fifth
defendant: 5% of the risk.
[7]
However, the principal negotiations were pursued between the
plaintiffs’ agent, an international firm of insurance
brokers
called Marsh, though its local subsidiary, and AIG, with the second
to fourth defendants ‘following on’, but
with some
differences in the limits on their liability. All were represented by
the same legal team. The fifth defendant, IUM presented
a slightly
different defence, and was represented by a separate legal team.
[8]
As the case involved a number of issues, the plaintiffs, and first to
fourth defendants, approached me to order a separation
of three
issues, on the basis that if any one of the three was resolved in the
defendants’ favour, that would end the claim.
Although the
fifth defendant opposed the separation, I considered it prudent to
nevertheless do so, and made the order on 24 May
2023.
[9]
Before I deal with what the separated issues are, it is necessary to
explain the history of the matter. Whilst the matter
has yet to be
fully litigated, I heard evidence on the limited issue and thereafter
argument. Most of the factual background thus
far is common cause and
the disputes of fact are limited. Primarily it is a question of what
legal conclusions should be drawn
from these facts.
The
hearing
[10]
The hearing consisted of the evidence of a single witness Andrew
Stockton, an erstwhile employee of Marsh, who testified
for the
plaintiffs. Discovery was limited to emails exchanged by the parties
during the relevant period and copies of the insurance
documents. The
parties agreed that the documents could be admitted without having to
be proved but subject to the right of any
party to challenge their
authenticity. No such challenge was made.
What
is the issue?
[11]
This case turns on a series of mishaps. The key issue was whether ICD
insurance, on which this claim is now premised,
formed part of the
agreement between the parties. Extraordinary as this might seem it
turns on the legal implications of oversights
in reading documents by
employees of the parties.
[12]
Between the time that the first request for a quotation was made by
Marsh on 23 July 2019, and the time a final policy
was signed in
March 2020, there had been 10 iterations of the contract, with the
term ICD, variously in or out. But on not one
occasion were these
modifications noticed by the party to whom the document been sent.
[13]
There is a simple explanation for this. Insurance contracts are
filled with dense type most of which is unchanging. What
the
professionals keep a look out for are the highlighted changes, and
then, the exclusions, the premiums, and the limits. But
where a term
is not highlighted and is buried in a long list of densely typed
terms, infrequently modified, they remain imperceptible
to the quick
look scrutiny that these professionals typically exercise. Such is
what happened in this case.
[14]
In the various exchanges of documents between the plaintiffs’
broker, Marsh and the defendants, two candidates
for which is the
proper contract have emerged, which form the subject matter of the
present dispute. Was it a version that the
plaintiffs’ broker
had sent to all the defendants with ICD out (he says inadvertently),
and which they all signed, after
which he told them that they were
now on risk. Or was it the penultimate version called a placement
slip, with ICD back, in which
the defendants had later all signed, or
was it the policy, a still later and final version, which still has
ICD in, and which only
AIG, the lead insurer had signed, apparently
without the inclusion being noticed by that company’s
representative. Insofar
as the other defendants are concerned are
they liable because AIG as the commonly accepted lead insurer had
signed off on the policy
– the final document in the saga
although none of them had – or are they liable because they had
signed off on the
placing slip (the penultimate document) with ICD
in.
[15]
There is no dispute about what the term ICD means. This is not a
dispute over interpretation. It is a dispute over which
is the
correct contract. If the plaintiffs are correct, they have cover. If
they are not, they have no cover, and it is the end
of their claim
against the defendants.
Background
[16]
The plaintiff companies own a newly built shopping centre known as
Fourways Mall. The ultimate controllers are a group
known as the
Georgiou Group. They own other centres which had previously been
insured by AIG brokered by Marsh. The plaintiffs
rely on this fact as
I discuss later.
[17]
In July 2019 the plaintiffs engaged Marsh Pty Ltd (“Marsh”),
the local affiliate of an international firm
of insurance brokers of
the same name, to secure insurance for the Mall. The employee
instructed with this task was Andrew Stockton
who was then employed
by Marsh as a new business development manager.
[1]
The Georgiou’s approached him to
get quotes for insurance cover for the Mall. He says they wanted
standard cover including
business interruption insurance although he
is candid in his witness statement when he says the client did not
specify ICD cover
in particular.
[18]
Duly briefed Stockton sent an email to two people at AIG on 23 July
2019. He chose AIG he says, because he wanted them
as the lead
insurer as they had the biggest capacity to take on this type of
insurance. Only one replied as he had got the wrong
email address for
the other. Whether the case may have had a different outcome if the
first person from AIG had dealt with the
issue we will never know.
[2]
The person who responded was Valerie
Wide. Wide was then employed by AIG as a senior underwriter. Like
Stockton, Wide has had many
years in the business. Thus, both parties
relied on experienced insurance professionals as the central figures
in this dispute.
Moreover, Stockton states he had several years of
dealing with Wide, so this was not their first interaction.
[19]
Being a large broker Marsh has its own standard form draft terms for
an insurance contract. It is referred to as POLDRA.
It is about
fifteen pages and contains a bespoke policy. What Stockton did was to
send out a request for quotation to Wide. Enclosed
with the email is
what Marsh termed its Realty Assets all Risk Quoting slip 2019”.
This quoting slip contains the standard
terms that Marsh makes use of
for its clients. On the front of the quoting document in a block with
a grey highlight the following
is stated:
“
Any amendments made by the
Insurer to this slip which are not highlighted shall not apply to
this quotation.”
[20]
This sentence is a crucial leg in the plaintiffs’ case. A
similar instruction is given by Marsh to its own staff
in an internal
document. In it, Marsh tells its’ staff that it has agreements
with all the major insurance companies (which
would include AIG) and
that if they (Marsh staff) change the wording on the bespoke policy,
as set out in the quoting slip, then
they must do so “…
by noting the required amendment on the quoting slip”.
[21]
The quoting slip that Stockton sent to Wide on 23 July 2019, was
Marsh’s standard form document. On page 8 of the
document,
under the heading “
Business Interruption: specific
extensions
”, is a paragraph, ten lines long, containing a
list of items. On the seventh line, wedged between the terms “
port
blockage”
and “
miscellaneous events”
is
the phrase central to the issue of liability to this case,
“
Infectious/Contagious Disease”
or as it has been
shortened in this case, ‘ICD cover’.
[22]
Wide duly sent a quotation back to Stockton on 5 August. It seems on
the prompting of Stockton that same day who said
he needed it
urgently. Wide sent it under cover of an email. She enclosed it
without comment other than apologising for the delay.
But the
quotation sent back by Wide had omitted the phrase,
“
Infectious/Contagious Disease”
from the block on
Business Interruption specific extensions cover. The omission is not
highlighted nor is it signalled by a strike
through. It is thus not
obviously detectable to a reader unless they painstakingly checked
every word against the standard policy.
Notable as well is that
Stockton had sent the quotation in a Word document (and thus easily
editable by the recipient including
the ability to highlight changes
using colour or strike outs) whilst Wide sent the quote back in PDF
form, and hence not easily
editable. But that is not the plaintiffs’
main point. It is common cause that in making the ICD omission Wide
did not highlight
this omission in any form or refer to this fact in
a covering email. It thus according to Stockton’s evidence an
omission
that went unnoticed by him.
[23]
What Wide did fill in more visibly, is the back end of the quote,
which deals with a schedule of sub-limits, special
conditions, and
premiums. It is more than likely it is this back-end information,
which contains the financial detail that Stockton
looked at, not the
rest of the base wording on the quote, since it had not been
highlighted. He wrote back on the 7 August 2019
asking for Wide to
requote on some aspects and indicating to her that the client was
part of the Georgiou Group, presumably to
remind her that the latter
were an existing client of both Marsh and AIG.
[24]
On 16 August 2019, Stockton sent out a new quoting slip to Wide
asking for an improved quote. The covering email indicates
that he
has made changes highlighted in yellow. But in this version ICD cover
is back
in
and not highlighted. Stockton was working off his
standard document and unaware of the previous omission of ICD, had
not highlighted
that it was now back in and included in this draft.
His changes highlighted in yellow are relevant to dates and the
schedule of
sub-limits. On 19 August 2019 Wide sent back her new
quote. This time no doubt because she worked off Stockton’s
last draft,
ICD cover was back
in
.
[25]
At the same time Stockton was following up with other insurers to see
if they will follow AIG’s lead and insure
a proportion of the
insured value. The second to fourth defendants (who I shall refer to
now as the “AIG” defendants)
each received a quote with
ICD in. It appears that all were happy to follow what OMI’s
David Julius referred to as AIG’s
lead terms. One can
reasonably infer from this and the industry practice that these
follow-on insurers follow the terms agreed
between the broker and the
lead insurer but differ only on the extent of their risk exposure,
specified exclusions and the premiums.
From this the plaintiffs argue
that one can infer that these three insurers were indifferent to
whether ICD was in or out; they
were agreeable to any terms the lead
insurer, whose identity they knew, had concluded with the broker on
behalf of its client.
[26]
The same went for IUM which received an RFQ from Stockton in
September 2019, with ICD in, and agreed to in industry jargon
to
follow their line capacity.
[27]
But on 17 September 2019 there was a break in the continuum; AIG sent
back a quoting slip, but this time ICD was
out
. Again, there
was a covering letter from Wide which makes no mention of this
omission. It is not clear whether Wide had worked
off her prior
document, sent in August (with ICD out), or whether she applied her
mind to what had been sent to her by Marsh, and
deleted it again.
Since she did not testify, we do not know.
[28]
On 1 October 2019 Wide wrote to another Marsh staffer, Lydia Motala,
to offer cover, broken up into a one-month segment
(October 209) to
be followed by one year’s cover, from 1 November 2019, to
coincide with cover for the rest of the Georgiou
Group.
[29]
Motala responded only on 8 October to say that the client had not yet
made a decision. But she says:
“
We
trust the terms offered on the whole Fourways Mall building will
remain valid past 15 November 2019, at which time a firm order
should
be provided by client.”
[30]
Motala did not testify so any interpretation of this email must be
made without her assistance. The AIG defendants suggest
this meant a
break in the continuum of the prior emails between Wide and Stockton.
On this interpretation any reference to terms
offered, must therefore
mean the terms last offered by AIG, which would be the September
quote, where ICD is excluded.
[31]
On 14 November 2019 Stockton again wrote to Wide and requested her to
provide “
the updated quoting slip asap”
as he
indicated the client wanted to go on risk from 16 November 2019. Wide
replied that same day and sent the quote as requested.
In the
covering email she says:
“
Please note I put out our
best terms after your note below. Please find attached the updated
quote as of today based on R 5 billion
lost limit, our 70% capacity
and BI deposit.”
[32]
Crucially to the case of the defendants, ICD was
out
in this
quote. Because of its significance in this case, I will refer to it
from now on as the November quotation slip. Stockton
then circulated
the same quotation slip to the other four defendants i.e. the one
with ICD
out
. What happened next in the chronology is that on
29 November 2019, Stockton sent an email addressed to Wide and the
other four
defendants in which he says:
“
Please note client is going
on risk from 1 December 2019. Period of insurance from 1 December
2019 to 30 November 2020.”
[33]
This email, say the defendants, constitutes an acceptance of Wide’s
and the other defendants offer of 14 November,
based on Wide as the
lead insurer’s quote which excluded ICD cover. This is why they
contend this is the contract between
them. Stockton’s evidence
is that this conclusion is incorrect as he was unaware of the
omission – just as he was earlier
in July. The difference now
was that he had circulated the document with ICD
out
.
[34]
Later events however add to the confusing picture and hence this
dispute. The practice in the industry is that once a
quote has been
accepted by the broker on behalf of the client (the plaintiffs), the
broker prepares a placing slip, which is then
circulated to the
insurance companies who have submitted the quotes. The placing slip
is meant to follow the terms of the quote
which was accepted. But
when the placing slip was circulated to the defendants ICD cover was
back in. But the circulation of the
placing slip had taken place
after the defendants were on risk – i.e. the indemnity was
operative as from December 1.
[35]
The practice is then for the insurers to sign the placing slip. All
the defendants did so sometime between 12 December
(AIG) and 21
January (OMI). However, in the case of AIG, it amended the placing
slip on 12 December. These changes are highlighted
in yellow. They
are not restricted to what I term the ‘back-end’ of the
placement document but include some changes
to the first section.
However, the inclusion of ICD cover remains
in
. Wide
eventually signed off on this version. To recap, she had signed the
placement policy, with ICD cover included, by 13 December
2019.
[36]
In the following year, on 10 March 2020, Lydia Motala, a senior
account executive from Marsh, sent Wide the policy for
final
signature. Wide emailed Motala back, requesting time to review the
document. She wrote:
“
Although I can appreciate
that the client expects their wording this morning, this will take
most of the day to go through and will
therefore probably only have
the wording sorted before 2pm this afternoon but will try and manage
the clients' expectation. Bear
in mind this was a November inception
and we've only had sight of the wording this morning.”
[37]
From the email trail there was a time lapse of approximately six
hours between the email Wide sent back to Motala, requesting
time to
review the document, and the later email Wide sent back to Motala in
which she indicates her acceptance. She also signed
the policy
document. This suggests that Wide knew that the policy was the final
agreement and hence her apparent care (at least
as it appears from
the emails) to read it carefully.
[38]
The significance of this is that the final policy contains ICD cover
in
. It mirrors the placement document that Wide had signed on
13 December. However, the policy document is some 64 page as compared
to the quoting slips which are 15 pages.
[39]
With this background in mind, I now consider the first separated
issue which is limited to the plaintiffs and the first
to fourth
defendants. The fifth defendant did not agree to this separation.
Issues
First
separated issue: Which is the contract?
[40]
In the separation agreement the salient terms are formulated as
follows
:
“
Whether the contract of
insurance consists of the policy in its final form as pleaded by the
plaintiffs or whether it consists of
the offer of the first defendant
in its quoting slip dated 14 November 2019 and the offers of the
second to fourth defendants dated
15
November
2019, 19 November 2019 and 15 November 2019 respectively ("the
offers") and the subsequent acceptance of the
offers on 29
November 2019, as pleaded by the first to fourth defendants, and the
plaintiffs response thereto as pleaded in their
replication to the
plea of the first to fourth defendants.”
[41]
To summarise the position. The plaintiffs contend that the reason the
policy is the contract between the parties is because
it is the final
version of the contract between the parties and thus on application
of the parol evidence rule, specifically the
integration rule, this
constitutes their contract, not the prior November quotation slip.
[42]
The first to fourth defendants reject the application of the parol
evidence rule. Their argument is that recent developments
in contract
law have limited its application from what it might have been
historically. Rather they argue that the contract is
the November
quotation slip, as this is the one that came into existence when
Stockton accepted it, by informing the defendants
that they were now
on risk as of 1 December. Put differently, the argument is that
whatever the negotiations were before that date,
because the contract
became operative on that date, it must be the one governing the
relationship between the parties.
[43]
The fifth defendant’s case on this issue is confusing. First,
it is not included in the first separated issue.
Second it has
pleaded the existence of both contracts and is thus on this point
adopting a wholly contradictory stance. On one
version, the November
contract is the candidate, on the other it is the March policy. In
short on the essential question is ICD
cover in or out, the fifth
respondent’s plea is that it is both. This may well be an error
although the fifth respondent
has not conceded this point. I will
therefore not consider its position further in this section but only
those of the first to
fourth defendants who here make common cause in
their position.
Parol
evidence rule
[44]
As classically formulated by Watermeyer, J.A., in
Union Government
v Vianini Ferro-Concrete Pipes (Pty.) Ltd
the rule is:
“
that when a contract has
been reduced to writing, the writing is, in general, regarded as the
exclusive memorial of the transaction
and in a suit between the
parties no evidence to prove its terms may be given save the document
or secondary evidence of its contents,
nor may the contents of such
document be contradicted, altered, added to or varied by parol
evidence".
[3]
[45]
A further formulation of the rule is contained in this passage from
Wigmore which is also frequently quoted in our case
law:
“
This process of embodying
the terms of a jural act in a single memorial may be termed the
integration of the act, i.e. its formation
from scattered parts into
an integral documentary unity. The practical consequences of this is
that its scattered parts, in their
former and inchoate shape, do not
have any jural effect; they are replaced by a single embodiment of
the act. In other words: When
a jural act is embodied in a single
memorial, all other utterances of the parties on that topic are
legally immaterial for the
purpose of determining what are the terms
of their act."
[4]
[46]
The plaintiffs argue that the policy is the final embodiment of the
agreement between them and all the defendants. The
inclusion of ICD
in the policy contradicts earlier versions such as the November
quotation where it is not included. Therefore,
on the ordinary
application of the integration rule the earlier evidence is
irrelevant. The policy is the final document it includes
ICD cover
therefore the first issue is answered – ICD is
in
.
[47]
In the policy although ICD is
in
,
it is drafted in a different form to that in the placement slip. In
the policy the single mention of the term is replaced by the
following paragraph, which is 7(f) of the policy.
[5]
“
7.
EXTENDED DAMAGE
“
The
Defined Event extends to include:
………
f) outbreak
of Infectious or Contagious disease within a radius of 25 kilometres
of the Premises Infectious or Contagious Disease
shall mean any human
infectious or human contagious illness or disease which a competent
authority has stipulated shall be notified
to them or has caused a
competent authority to declare a notifiable medical condition to
exist or impose quarantine regulations
or restrict access to any
place.”
[48]
The AIG defendants argue that the parol evidence rule has been given
a narrower scope following a line of cases most
recently in
Capitec
.
[6]
In
Capitec
the court first referred to the most
recent Constitutional Court decision on the parol evidence rule in
this way:
“
The Constitutional Court in
University of Johannesburg also recognised the parol evidence rule in
our law. It sought to reconcile
the generous admissibility of
extrinsic evidence of context and purpose with the strictures of the
parol evidence rule in the following
way:
“
The integration facet of the
parol evidence rule relied on by the Supreme Court of Appeal is
relevant when a court is concerned
with an attempted amendment of a
contract. It does not prevent contextual evidence from being adduced.
The rule is concerned with
cases where the evidence in question seeks
to vary, contradict or add to (as opposed to assist the court to
interpret) the terms
of the agreement. . . .”
[7]
[49]
But in
Capitec
the court went on to remark that:
“
The proposition that context
is everything is not a licence to contend for meanings unmoored in
the text and its structure. Rather,
context and purpose may be used
to elucidate the text.”
[8]
[50]
But argue the plaintiffs, whether ICD is in or out, is not an issue
of interpretation, where admittedly, context may
assist in the
elucidation of the text. The facts in this case remain a standard
case for the application of the parol evidence
rule. Nevertheless,
because the case also concerned an alternative plea of rectification
evidence of context was considered.
[51]
This is because as in
Hutchison et
al,
the authors
note:
“
Once a claim for
rectification is made, all evidence that is relevant to demonstrate
that the parties included a wrong term or intended
(but neglected) to
include a certain term is admissible.”
[9]
[52]
But this evidence did not assist. What is quite clear is that while
with hindsight the presence or absence of ICD cover
has become
crucial, it was not seen that way at the time. Stockton concedes this
point. But there is nothing to suggest that Wide
saw it as crucial
either.
[53]
Because she was not called to testify, we do not have direct evidence
on this point from her. But there is no evidence
from her many emails
in the record that she gave the issue any consideration. Certainly,
Wide appears to have been a most fastidious
reader of the documents.
Even when she received the final placement from Marsh in
mid-December, she noted further changes, such
as a reference to a
boat of 20 metres being changed to one of six. But despite this eye
for detail, the inclusion or re-inclusion
of ICD cover, passed her
by. It also went unnoticed when she perused the policy for several
hours on 10 March 2024. It is more
probable that a reader of a
document sent back by the other party would, if they were
scrutinising it, confirm that their deletion
had been retained (i.e.
Wide) than a reader who had not ever been alerted to it would notice
its omission (i.e. Stockton).
[54]
Thus, on the facts of this case there is no reason not to apply the
traditional approach and apply the integration rule.
The policy is
the longer document incorporating in the words of Wigmore “
the
scattered parts
” of the earlier documents into an
integrated whole. It is relevant that it is the complete document as
opposed to the quotation
documents which are not. Moreover, the ICD
cover sentence is transformed from one that is cryptic phrase in the
base POLDRA wording,
to two sentences that explain its application.
Stockton’s’ ‘
go
live’
email in
November, is, on his evidence, based on a mistaken assumption that in
respect of the ICD cover, the quote of 14 November
still remained
true to the Marsh POLDRA standard form draft i.e. with ICD cover in.
[55]
The defendants had argued that the placing slip of 11 December (with
ICD back in) and the policy documents were not of
any jural
significance. They amounted to no more than Marsh performing
administrative functions.
[56]
But this is belied by the actions of Wide. She made amendments to the
placing slip although she did not remove ICD cover.
She also took
time to scrutinise the policy in March 2020 before she signed it.
[57]
Were the November quotation understood to be the final agreement, and
the placement and the policy document, simply one
signed for the sake
of bureaucratic form, no doubt she would not have needed to correct
the placement slip and then subject the
policy to careful scrutiny.
This is a reasonable inference from the facts. Wide could have
testified to the contrary but the AIG
defendants, all represented by
the same legal team, chose not to call her. The defendants sought to
make much of the fact that
evidence in such cases involved the
fallibility of human memory and that recall of past beliefs may be
revised to make them consistent
with current beliefs. Hence because
of this fallibility of memory a judge should place greater reliance
on documentary evidence
than on what witnesses might say.
[10]
I have no difficulty with this
observation. But Wide has not come at all to explain any difficulty
in memorising the events. Nor
was she available to be asked at all if
she may still be aware of why she made the omission, whether she
passed on the omission
in the contracts of reinsurance that followed
the placing, or how she dealt with the issue in past dealings with
ICD insurance
for the Georgiou Group.
[58]
I find, applying the integration rule, that the policy is the
contract for the purpose of the first separated issue.
That being the
case the contract contained ICD cover.
Second
separated issue rectification
.
[59]
The salient part of the second separated issue is framed as follows:
“
Whether the contract of
insurance stands to be rectified as pleaded by the first to fifth
defendants and the plaintiffs' pleaded
response thereto in their
replications,”
[60]
The AIG defendants argue that the first and second rectification
issues are joined at the hip, in the sense that they
both raise the
same issue – was ICD coverage in or out. In that respect I
agree. Certain of the facts that I referred to
earlier also apply the
rectification issue. The question is whether a case for rectification
is made out on the facts.
[61]
This aspect of the defence must be considered because rectification
overrides the parol evidence rule.
[11]
The law on rectification is not
controversial. The party seeking rectification must establish that
the document does not reflect
the common intention of the
parties.
[12]
[62]
This was more recently set out in
Soil Fumigation Services Lowveld
CC v Chemfit Technical Products Pty Ltd
where Brand JA held:
“
It
is a settled principle that a party who seeks rectification must show
facts entitling him to that relief 'in the clearest and
most
satisfactory manner…. In essence, a claimant for rectification
must prove that the written agreement does not correctly
express what
the parties had intended to set out therein."
[13]
[63]
A more specific view on insurance contracts is expressed by
Hemsworth
et al
in their work on
Insurance contracts:
[14]
[64]
In this regard the authors emphasise:
“
For
rectification to be ordered, there must have been a prior common
agreement in terms different from those recorded in the policy
...
Further
the prior common agreement in accordance with which rectification is
sought must have been unchanged between the time of
the agreement and
the issue of the policy
.”
(emphasis
provided).
[65]
Although the onus to establish rectification lay with the defendants
none of them led any witness. The only witness was
Stockton who
testified for the plaintiffs. His evidence was that there was no such
common intention. Whilst this evidence may be
subject to caution
given that with hindsight and what was at stake for both the
plaintiffs and his erstwhile employer Marsh, he
could be said to be
subject to powerful incentives to contend for this position.
Nevertheless, his evidence on this point held
up under
cross-examination. Nor was there any document in the record to
gainsay what he testified to. Nor is it likely, given that
ICD was
part of the standard POLDRA draft, that Marsh would have given up
this cover without clearly communicating this to their
client the
plaintiffs, or negotiating this with their insurance company
counterparts. But there is no evidence of this.
[66]
The AIG defendants got a witness statement from Wide. She was clearly
available to be called. The failure to call her
on this crucial point
justifies an adverse inference being drawn.
[67]
In the English case of
Herrington
Lord Diplock remarked:
“
The appellants, who are a
public corporation, elected to call no witnesses, thus depriving the
court of any positive evidence as
to whether the condition of the
fence and the adjacent terrain had been noticed by any particular
servant of theirs or as to what
he or any other of their servants
either thought or did about it. This is a legitimate tactical move
under our adversarial system
of litigation. But a defendant who
adopts it cannot complain if the court draws from the facts which
have been disclosed all reasonable
inferences as to what are the
facts which the defendant has chosen to withhold.”
[15]
[68]
The adverse inference to be drawn here is that Wide’s deletion
of ICD cover, without it being highlighted, or in
other respects
signified, was either unintended or deliberately done to avoid being
noticed. It is not possible on the evidence
to determine which of
these inferences is the one to be drawn. But for the plaintiff’s
case, if it is either, it negates
the possibility of any common
intention between the plaintiffs and AIG.
[69]
As for the other defendants, none of them called a witness to
testify. This means they must stand and fall by the failure
to call
any of their own or AIG’s choice not to call Wide. The evidence
is that as AIG was the lead insurer the others followed
it on the
core terms of the agreement. The inclusion or exclusion of ICD was
not material to them at the time. What was material
was their degree
of participation in the indemnity, and the respective premiums as the
correspondence indicates. None of them addressed
the issue of ICD.
[70]
Nor can it be suggested that by sending the draft with ICD out in
November 2019 (the fact the defendants must clutch
on to) that
Stockton and or Marsh signified an ongoing common intent separate
from what happened earlier. The omission of ICD by
Wide was done in a
paragraph of dense type where the deletion was not visible. Moreover,
it was done in a paragraph where there
are no sentences – it is
just a list of nouns. Thus, had it been a change in sentence or
meaning this might have been more
detectable to the reader. But it
was not. Wide did not come to explain why she had made this deletion
without signifying it.
[71]
The plaintiffs make much of the fact that for two years after the
summons was issued this fact was not brought to light.
While this
fact is not decisive on its own it is at least consistent with their
version. If there had been an ongoing intent to
have ICD deleted why
was this not picked up earlier? The AIG defendants argued that the
delay was caused by the ongoing litigation
over Covid 19, and its
consequences for business interruption, in the
Café
Chameleon
case that was
being litigated at the time, with one of the defendant’s
Guardrisk, as the insurance party. That may be so but
surely any
uncertainty at the time over what such a clause meant could have been
obviated if the defendants’ case was that
there was no such
clause in their contract with the plaintiffs.
[16]
That may not be the only inference to
be drawn but without a witness testifying for the defendants it’s
not an unreasonable
one to draw.
[72]
What remains a mystery is why Wide deleted the cover when she sent
back her quotation on 1 August 2019, in PDF form,
without signifying
the deletion.
[73]
The plaintiffs have succeeded in establishing that it was at least an
industry practice that changes of this nature get
signalled.
Moreover, this practice makes perfect business sense. It applies to
the broker as well, as a Marsh internal drafting
instructions note to
its staff indicates. In its note Marsh tells its brokers that if they
must not amend any clause in the base
POLDRA wording “
unless
such options have been specifically endorsed under the Special
Endorsements in the Specification.”
[74]
But the instructions go on to remark:
“
Insurers cannot be expected
to read every word of the policy to check we have not made changes to
the base policy “
[75]
But although this is an internal document and does not bind AIG or
the other defendants, it is evidence of a business
practice that is
both rational and pragmatic. If each returned document, be it a
quote, a subsequent counter offer or a placement,
had to be re-read
line by line, the expenses of both parties would increase, and no
doubt be passed on to the insured party. Nor
is there any guarantee
that human error would not still prevail, and some unspecified change
in otherwise standard wording, would
pass unnoticed. If Wide had some
other reason for the deletion and explanation for why it should have
been detected by Stockton,
she has not testified to the enlighten
this court.
[76]
There is no evidence of any common understanding. This requirement
for rectification on which the defendants have the
onus has not been
met and the second separated issue must also be decided in favour of
the plaintiffs. I now go on to consider
whether any of the other
defendants – the second to the fifth have put up any unique
facts which must justify rectification
on their part. I deal first
with the second to fourth defendants whom I have termed the other AIG
defendants largely because on
all issues they have made common cause
with AIG and were represented by the same legal team.
The
other Defendants
[77]
No witnesses testified for any of the other defendants. An exception
was made in respect of Paul Goodal on behalf of
the fourth defendant.
Goodall had passed away before this trial commenced, but the parties
agreed that an affidavit that he had
made in a related proceeding
between these parties could be admitted as his witness statement in
this matter.
[17]
[78]
Goodall explains briefly how the fourth defendant, Guardrisk
Insurance Company Limited, came to be the fourth defendant
in the
matter taking up 3% of the risk, leading the plaintiffs to withdraw
against another firm previously cited, IIA. This is
not a material
issue for the present matter. He then explains that Stockton had
approached him to see if Guardrisk would take up
some of the risk.
Stockton then sent him the November quote (i.e. the one with ICD
out
). On 15 November 2019, Goodall replied that Guardrisk had
agreed to take up the 3% or as he expressed a 3% line. He then also
received
the Stockton ‘going on risk’ email.
[79]
At the end of the Stockton ‘going on risk’ email he
remarks: “
Closing to follow in due course
.”
Goodall says he understood the term closing to be a reference to the
POLDRA base wording, which he understood to mean that
once a
quotation had been accepted the placing slip had to reflect what was
recorded in the quoting slip, and thereafter similarly
the policy. He
explains that when Mbilase from Marsh had sent him the placing slip
on 13 December 2019, with IDC now
in
he did not check it,
acting on the assumption that it was the same wording as in the
quoting slip, and he therefore signed it and
sent it back. When he
was sent the policy on 13 March 2020, he simply noted that it was
signed by AIG on 10 March. He does not
state whether he noticed this
inclusion of ICD cover, but one can assume, like the other AIG
defendants, he did not.
[80]
What Goodall’s affidavit amounts to is a recognition that
insurers understood the POLDRA drafting statement as
reflective of
their relationship with Marsh and by extension Marsh’s clients
the plaintiffs. Goodall does not make this point
himself although it
was argued more forcefully by IUM the fifth respondent and
independently represented. Their point is one of
timing. Whatever had
happened between Wide and Stockton previously they were not involved.
They only enter negotiations on the
basis of the POLDRA wording sent
to them in the November quoting slip – the one with ICD
out
-
and on this basis they accept, and based on the POLDRA understanding,
assume without checking, that the placement and the policy
will
follow this language. As it happened, they were wrong.
[81]
What Goodall and the fifth defendant are contending, which differs
from the approach taken by AIG in these proceedings,
is that the
POLRDA drafting rules regulated the relationship between the insurer
and Marsh, and by extension Marsh’s clients,
and hence in terms
of these rules, once the quotation had been accepted, the insurance
company was entitled to expect that the
placement and the policy had
to follow its terms. Since they had accepted a quote in which ICD was
out
, they were entitled to expect, without having to verify
this, that ICD was also out in the placement document and the policy.
OIM
and Bryte
[82]
OMI put up one witness statement from David Julius but did not call
him to testify. Therefore, I must confine myself
to the evidence on
interactions between him and Stockton from the emails they exchanged.
When Stockton first interacted with Julius,
he sent him a quoting
slip dated 19 August 2019, which had ICD cover
in
. On 21
August Julius confirmed it would be able to offer a 12.5% “
following
capacity behind AIG’s lead terms.”
Later in the email
he says: “
I will send you a copy of “our standard
terms and conditions.”
There is some ambiguity here. Is
Julius accepting the quote based on AIG’s lead terms i.e. ICD
in - or on OMI’s standard
terms which he does not set out.
There are further emails between the two dealing with a survey on
fire risk which OMI wanted to
see. The next interaction relevant to
the separated issues is the one dealt with earlier. Stockton sends
the November quotation
(ICD out) to Julius. On 15 November Julius
confirmed that “
see attached our confirmation of our 10%
follow capacity behind AIG’s terms
.” He mentions
increasing this capacity, if possible, from the reinsurance market
once he had their feedback. The only specific
mention he makes is
about a deductible for a sprinkler management system. Thereafter the
chronology is the same. OMI get the placement
slip with ICD now
in
and it is signed on 21 January 2020 by Julius. OMI was circulated the
policy on 10 March 2020 that had been signed by AIG. There
is no
evidence that OMI queried the fact that ICD was included in the
policy.
Bryte (Third Defendant)
[83] Bryte prepared a witness
statement from Kenneth Prentice but did not call him or anyone else
as a witness. On the facts,
Bryte is a similar position to Guardrisk
in respect of the separate issues. It is a latecomer, in that its
first interaction in
writing was when it received the November
quoting slip ( ICD out); which it then agreed to. Like the others it
then got the placement
slip (ICD in) which it signed. It then
received the policy as signed by Wide, as did all the others. It
gives no indication in
the correspondence on any view on ICD cover
being in or out. The only issue that Prentice signals is the “…
clients strategy regarding ... risk improvements
” This
latter remark does not have anything to do with ICD cover.
Fifth
Defendant (IUM)
[84]
The firth defendant presented a witness statement for one witness,
Ryan Shephard. Shepard was previously employed by
IUM at the relevant
time. He was not called as a witness. However, Stockton in cross
examination conceded that he did not disagree
with what was stated in
Shepherd’s witness statement. Stockton had also not put up a
rebuttal statement in respect of Shepherd’s
witness statement,
unlike he had with the others.
[18]
Given this concession IUM did not call
Shepherd and hence argued that this places it in a different position
to those defendants
who chose not to call anyone.
[85]
Shepherd received the quoting slip from Stockton on 14 September
2019. In this quotation slip ICD is
in.
IUM then offered ICD
cover but says this subject to a limit of R 1 million. This was
further limited by its share of the risk which
was 5%, resulting in a
risk limit of R 50 000. Stockton appears to concede that this
was correct. However, whatever the merits
of this argument by IUM, it
was not made part of the separated issues. Nor can it be read into
the rectification issue as it has
been framed. This issue must
therefore wait for the trial or if I am requested to consider doing
so, a further separation.
[86]
As regards ICD cover Shepherd states that his offer to Marsh was
subject to a time limit that expired on 30 October.
Stockton then
approached him for a new quote with the November quotation –
i.e. the one with ICD out.
IUM then responded to
this quote but subject to the same limitations mentioned earlier. The
same chronology then follows. IUM accepts
the quote without ICD
cover, receives the placement slip with ICD back in but does not
notice this. IUM similarly received the
policy without noticing ICD
was in. Shepherd’s assumption was that the placement slip, and
policy would follow the wording
of the November placing slip. He
says: “
It was commonly accepted
that the placing slip and/or the policy wording would be consistent
with the 14 November placing slip”.
Second
to Fifth Defendants
[87]
The second to fifth defendants are for the purposes of the
rectification plea in a similar position. Whatever the past
history
with Wide’s omission of ICD when they received the November
quoting slip, they quoted when it was omitted, and Stockton
then
informed them all in the same email that they were now on risk. None
noticed the inclusion of ICD cover in the placement slip
which all
signed, or the inclusion in the policy which all received, but did
not sign, unlike Wide.
[88]
The plaintiffs argue that notwithstanding that this may be the case,
they have not established a common ongoing intent.
They have not
established that Stockton ever intended to exclude ICD cover when he
asked them to quote. Nor, since none of them
testified, have they
stated that they were aware that ICD had been omitted in the November
quote and thus departed in that way
from the standard POLDRA base
wording. It is unlikely that they were aware of this omission –
its presence or absence is
not mentioned in any of the
contemporaneous correspondence which are detailed on many other
issues - so even their subjective intentions
are not established, as
the plaintiffs have argued.
[89]
Thus, none of them can rely on this crucial leg of the claim for
rectification. Like AIG, and indeed Marsh, it is clear
that ICD was
not an issue at the time. The second to fifth defendants were focused
as follow on insurers with limits or subjectivities,
premiums and in
respect of some, fire safety measures. They were confident that the
lead insurer AIG had adopted terms they would
be willing to accept.
This was not an unreasonable approach. AIG was responsible for a 70%
indemnity and so had the most to lose.
Its stands to reason that
others would accept that they could follow on the terms it had
accepted. None of them have made out a
case for rectification that is
distinctive from that of AIG. The second separated issue must be
decided in favour of the plaintiffs
in respect of the second to fifth
respondents.
Third
separated issue
[90]
The third separated issue is only raised by the AIG defendants (first
to fourth). They contend that the plaintiffs had
not made payment of
the full premium and hence are not entitled to be indemnified.
[91]
The business interruption insurance was to be calculated in this way.
An estimate of the amount to be insured was made
at the outset of the
policy. The amount was based on the Mall’s annual turnover.
Since this could only be ascertained at
the end of the year for which
the Mall was insured, an estimate was made, and the plaintiffs were
then to pay 65% of this amount
at the commencement of the policy. It
is common cause that they did so paying an amount of R4 384 806.25.
What the plaintiff then
had to do was to make a declaration at the
end of the insurance period, of what the actual amount was and then
pay the additional
insurance that was due.
[92]
The AIG defendants claim that on the expiry of the insurance period
this declaration was never made nor was the additional
premium that
was due paid.
[93]
They rely on the following clause:
“
in consideration of payment
of the premium by or on behalf of the Insured, the Insurer agrees to
indemnify”
[94]
There is no dispute that the declaration was never made, nor if there
was an amount due, that there was no further premium
paid. However,
the plaintiffs argue:
a. Firstly, that there was no
penalty provided for in the policy if the declaration was not made;
b. The insured event had
occurred prior to the balance of payment being due;
c. It was practice for the
insurer to call for the declaration and AIG did not:
d. Even if there had been a
declaration made there was no additional premium owing indeed more
likely a repayment of the deposit
was due to the plaintiffs;
e. The insurance policy was
renewed without the insurer making any claim for a top up from the
plaintiffs; and
f. To the extent that any top up
was due (which the plaintiffs deny) they tendered payment to the AIG
defendants.
[95]
The defendants they rely on the following passage in the judgment of
the SCA in
Parsons
Transport (Pty) Ltd v Global insurance Co Ltd
[19]
:
“
...was
merely to recite the corresponding obligation of the appellant, which
the respondent might have been entitled to insist on,
i.e. that the
premium be paid, before compensating the appellant in the event of a
claim for an occurrence before the premium was
due.”
[96]
But this paragraph does not have anything to do with the premium
dispute in this matter nor are the clauses relied on
comparable. As
noted by the plaintiffs, the general clause in the policy does not
provide for a penalty for non-payment of the
penalty. In any event
there is no evidence before me that there was a top-up premium due.
Without it, this point is a non-starter.
[97]
The third disputed point is decided in favour of the plaintiffs.
Costs
[98]
Both the AIG defendants and the plaintiffs made use of two counsel.
In the case of the plaintiffs, they made use of two
senior counsel,
whist the fifth defendant made use of one counsel. I consider that
given the complexity of the case and that the
case was defended by
two separate legal teams, the cost of two counsel is justified,
although not two senior counsel.
ORDER:-
[99] In the result the
following order is made:
IT
IS ORDERED THAT
the issues separated
for prior determination by this Court in terms of the directive
issued on 24 May 2023 are determined as follows:
1.
The
contract of insurance consists of the policy in its final form as
pleaded by the plaintiffs.
2.
The
contract of insurance does not stand to be rectified as pleaded by
the first to fifth defendants.
3.
The
dispute regarding the premium is decided in favour of the plaintiffs
and the defence pleaded by the first to fourth defendants
in
paragraph 31.4 of their plea, fails.
4.
All
costs associated with the determination of the separated issues are
to be paid by the first to fifth defendants, jointly and
severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, which costs include the
costs of two counsel.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
20 November 2023 – 22 November 2023
Date of
Arguments: 18
January 2024 – 19 January 2024
Submission of Draft Order: Plaintiff -
22 January 2024
First to Fourth Defendant -
23 January
2024
Fifth Defendant -
24 January 2024
Date of Judgment:
03 May 2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Plaintiff:
MC Maritz SC
G Elliott SC
Instructed
by.
Thomson Wilks Inc
Counsel for the First to Fourth
Defendants: IP Green SC
R Ismail
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel
Counsel for the Fifth
Defendant:
EJ Ferreira SC
Instructed
by:
Engelbrecht Attorneys Inc.
[1]
He has since been employed by another firm.
[2]
His first email was sent to a Brian Willougby. Seven minutes later
on the same day he forwarded the same email to Wide saying
“I
can’t
seem to push it to Brian.”
[3]
1941 AD 43
at p. 47.
[4]
Wigmore,
Evidence
,
3rd ed., vol. 9, sec. 2425,
quoted
in
N
ational
Board (Pretoria) (Pty) Ltd and another v Estate Swanepoel
1975
(3) SA 16
(A) at page 26.
[5]
Page 49 of the policy under the heading Extended Damage.
[6]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others 2022
(1)
SA 100 (SCA).
[7]
Capitec
,
supra, paragraph 41.
[8]
Capitec
,
supra, paragraph 51
[9]
Hutchison et al,
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
,
Third Edition, paragraph 11.5.2.2, pages 277-8.
[10]
See in this regard the remarks of Leggat J in an English decision
Gestmin
SGPS SA v Credit Suisse Securities UK Limited et al
[2013]
EWHC 3560
(Comm) paragraphs 15-23.
[11]
See Harms,
Amlers
Precedent of pleadings,
Ninth
Edition, page 310, and
Tesven
CC v South African Bank of Athens SA 2000(1) 268 (SCA).
[12]
Van Huysteen et al Contract General Principles, Sixth Edition, page
196, paragraph 5.52.
[13]
2004(6) SA 29(SCA) at paragraph 21.
[14]
The Law of Insurance Contracts by Hemsworth and Others, 2023, London
at p14-1 to 14-2.
[15]
Herrington
v British Railways Board
[1972] UKHL 1
;
[1972]
AC 877
at 930F.
[16]
Guardrisk
Insurance Company Limited v Cafe Chameleon
CC
2021 (2) SA 323 (SCA).
[17]
This was an earlier application where the plaintiffs in this matter
had sought a declaratory order. That matter was withdrawn
by consent
with costs reserved due to the commencement of the present matter.
[18]
This was a commercial court case. This meant that all the parties
were required to put up witness statements of the witnesses
they
were to call. Effectively their evidence in chief. The plaintiffs’
filed their statements first, and the defendants
filed theirs in
response. As agreed, the plaintiffs were entitled to fill rebuttal
statements which Stockton and Motala did.
[19]
(1) SA 488 SA.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Azrapart (Pty) Limited v Huseyin (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/5357) [2024] ZAGPJHC 874 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 874High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 689 (23 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 689High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Azize Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Machite Engineering CC (055795/22) [2025] ZAGPJHC 987 (7 October 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 987High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Ex Parte N.C.L (2024/037055) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1144 (6 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1144High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Aziz v Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (2023/012763) [2024] ZAGPJHC 69 (12 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 69High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar