Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 689South Africa
Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 689 (23 July 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 689 (23 July 2024)
Azrapart (Pty) Ltd and Another v AIG South Africa Limited and Others (049359/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 689 (23 July 2024)
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sino date 23 July 2024
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
23 July 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
LEAVE
TO APPEAL - SEPARATED ISSUES
MANOIM J:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal brought by five defendants
in this matter. All are insurance companies who
are being sued by the
two plaintiffs in this matter, owners of a shopping mall for a claim
for business interruption insurance.
The claim against the defendants
is large – approximately one billion rand. The claim for
business interruption insurance
arises from the Covid epidemic in the
2020 financial year.
[2]
The plaintiffs allege that due to the pandemic they lost this amount
in rental income from the tenants, or at least some
of them, in the
Fourways Mall, a large commercial shopping centre. There is no
dispute that the five defendants had indemnified
the plaintiffs in
respect of business interruption insurance during the period in
question. What is in dispute is whether the plaintiffs
were covered
for infectious and contagious diseases or ICD cover.
[3]
From the pleadings the dispute concerned whether the proper contract
was one concluded in November 2019 (what the defendants
term the
antecedent contract) or the policy signed the following year in March
2020.
[1]
What turned on this was
that in the antecedent contract, ICD cover was not included, but in a
subsequent contract, the placement
contract, and then the policy, it
was. The plaintiffs contend based on the parol evidence rule that the
policy constituted the
final memorial of the agreement between the
parties and thus was the proper contract. The first to fourth
defendants contended
that it was the antecedent contract because it
was accepted by the plaintiffs’ broker and brought into
operation on 1 December
2024.
[4]
The presence or absent of ICD cover is not the only dispute between
the parties in this litigation. But given the centrality
of this
dispute at the behest of the four defendant and the plaintiffs, I
separated the issues into three questions. The fifth
respondent
opposed the separation issue although when the separation was ordered
it participated in the proceedings.
[5]
The first separated question was to identify which was the correct
contract. The second was that assuming the correct
contract issue was
decided against the first to fourth defendants whether they were
entitled to rectification. The third issue
related to the payment of
the premium. The second separated issue involved the fifth defendant.
I found against the defendants
including the fifth defendant, on all
three issues.
[6]
The first to fourth defendants now seek leave to appeal on the first
and second separated issue but not the third which
dealt with the
premium. The fifth defendant seeks leave to appeal on the basis that
it had been wrongly excluded from consideration
on the first issue
and hence its case on the second issue – rectification –
could not properly be considered because
it was not clear what
contract it was seeking to have rectified.
[7]
The first to fourth defendants have raised seven grounds of appeal.
The first and second ground of appeal are made on
behalf of all four
defendants and address the finding on the proper contract and
rectification issues, respectively. The third
to sixth grounds deal
with the specific cases of the second to fourth defendants,
respectively. Essentially the argument made here
is that the latter
defendants had made out in addition to the defences raised by the
first defendant – the lead insurer-
distinctive defences
pertinent to them.
[8]
The final or seventh ground is again made in respect of all four
defendants. Here the argument is that the issues to be
decided in
this case in relation to what is termed the POLDRA policies, are
issues being raised in other pending matters and hence
are issues of
public interest to insurers and insured. This ground is based on a
section 17(1)(a) (ii) of the Superior Courts Act
which provides as an
alternate ground “a compelling reason” for the appeal to
be heard. In terms of the
Caratco
decision a compelling
reason:
“…
includes
an important question of law or a discreet issue of public importance
that will have an effect on future disputes. But
here too, the merits
remain vitally important and are often decisive. Caratco must satisfy
this court that it has met this threshold."
[2]
[9]
As the first to fourth defendants put it:
“
The
issues raised in this matter in relation to POLDRA policies have
arisen in a number of pending matters in this court which are
still
to be heard, and are issues of public importance to insurers and
insureds
.”
[10]
But even if this may be the position, I have no information before me
that these cases raise the same issues of fact
and law that the
present one does. I was also told that similar issues have arisen in
recently decided arbitrations. But again,
I have insufficient
information that this is the case. I therefore cannot grant leave to
appeal based on this ground without more
pertinent information
concerning the issue.
[11]
I am however persuaded that the first ground of appeal, on what the
proper contract is, does constitute a ground of appeal
with a
reasonable prospect of success in terms of section 17(1)(a) (i). The
second ground of appeal related to rectification is
joined at the hip
to this ground as I go on to explain and so it too would qualify as
having reasonable prospects of success.
[12]
Here, succinctly expressed, the issue is what the relationship of an
antecedent contract and the final contract are where
they differ on a
crucial term. On the unusual facts of this case the antecedent
contract was signed off by all the defendants and
for a time period
regarded by the plaintiffs as being in force. On this antecedent
contract ICD was not included.
[13]
This antecedent contract constituted a quote emanating from all the
defendants. The plaintiffs through their agent accepted
these quotes
so the argument goes when he emailed all of them to say we are going
live from 1 December. The conundrum was that
all the defendants later
signed the next document in the process the – placing slip
which did include ICD cover. Then came
the final document the policy.
The policy included ICD although it was only signed by the first
defendant the lead insurer. But
the facts are even more complicated
because preceding the antecedent contract was a series of email
exchanges enclosing drafts
where the ICD cover was variously in or
out.
[14]
In this jumble of confusion, I relied on the parol evidence rule to
find in favour of the plaintiffs. This was because
I found that the
policy was the final version and so the integration rule applied. I
also found against the defendants on rectification.
Essentially
because they never led any witnesses on the subject of an ongoing
common intention unlike the plaintiffs. The defendants
stridently
maintain that they did not need to do so. They rely on this passage
in
Meyer
v Merchants Trust
that
“
proof
of an antecedent agreement may be the best proof of the common
intention".
[3]
[15]
Thus, the first to fourth defendants rely on the antecedent agreement
as the basis for both proof of the contract and
rectification.
I accept that in cases where the parol evidence rule is relied
on
“…it occurs in the same context as the parol evidence
rule”
[4]
.
[16]
For this reason, I do not have to decide whether the prospects for
appeal have their merits in either the first ground
or the second
ground. To the extent that there is this interface between the two
premised on the existence of an antecedent contract
they cover the
same ground.
[17]
I am satisfied that this point has reasonable prospects on appeal and
justifies because of it unusual features engaging
the appellate
jurisdiction of the SCA.
[5]
[18]
I do not need then need to consider the merits of the other grounds
of appeal raised by the second to fourth defendants.
[19]
The fifth defendant’s grounds of appeal remain obtuse for me
because as I noted in my judgment at paragraph 43
that the manner in
which they pleaded the contract in this case was unclear.
Nevertheless, they signed the same document which
the first to fourth
defendants contend is the antecedent contract. On this basis the
fifth defendant is also covered by this ground
of appeal.
Accordingly, I grant the fifth defendant leave to appeal as well.
[20]
Costs for the appeal are as is normally the case are costs in the
appeal.
ORDER:-
[21] In the result
the following order is made:
1. Leave to appeal
to the Supreme Court of Appeal is granted for the first to fifth
defendants.
2. Costs to be
costs in the appeal.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 18 July
2024
Date of Judgment: 23 July
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]
I will use the term antecedent contract from now on, but I accept
that the plaintiffs do not accept this terminology
[2]
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA) (25 March 2020).
[3]
1942 AD 244
at 253
[4]
Van Huyssteen et all
Contract
General Principles
,
Sixth edition page 194.
[5]
See
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Anothe
r
JDR 2214 SCA, where the court held that: "
An
applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case
or one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must
be a sound,
rational basis to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of
success on appeal.”
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