Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 186South Africa
43 AIR School Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v AIG South Africa Ltd (30404/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 186 (20 February 2023)
Headnotes
by a Trust. The fourth applicant is Jet Orientation Centre, (Pty) Ltd (JOC). PTC and 43 Air School hold shares equally in JOC, making 43 Air School an effective holder of 75% of shares in JOC.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## 43 AIR School Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v AIG South Africa Ltd (30404/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 186 (20 February 2023)
43 AIR School Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v AIG South Africa Ltd (30404/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 186 (20 February 2023)
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sino date 20 February 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 30404/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE: 20 February 2023
In the matter between:
43
AIR SCHOOL HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
1
st
Applicant
43
AIR SCHOOL (PTY)
LTD
2
nd
Applicant
PTC
AVIATION (PTY)
LTD
3
rd
Applicant
JET
ORIENTATION CENTRE (PTY) LTD
4
th
Applicant
And
AIG
SOUTH AFRICA
LTD
Respondent
(This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ 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
20 February 2023.)
JUDGMENT
MIA, J
[1]
The applicants sought the following relief.
“
1.
Declaring that the respondent is liable to compensate the second,
third and fourth applicants in respect of business interruption
insurance cover, from the period from 27 March 2020 to 31 May 2020.
2. Directing the
respondent to engage the second, third and fourth applicants
meaningfully for the purposes of quantifying
the monetary value of
the claims of each of the second, third and fourth applicants for
compensation in respect of business interruption
insurance for the
period from 27 March 2020 to 31 May 2020.
3. Directing the
respondent to pay the applicants costs.”
[2]
The first applicant is 43 Air School Holdings (Pty) Ltd (Holdings),
it has 100 percent shares in the
second applicant, 43 Air School
(Pty) Ltd (43 Air School). 43 Air School is the main operating entity
which consists of all four
applicants.
[3]
The third applicant is PTC Aviation (Pty) Ltd (PTC). Holdings holds
50 percent shares in PTC and the
balance is held by a Trust. The
fourth applicant is Jet Orientation Centre, (Pty) Ltd (JOC). PTC and
43 Air School hold shares
equally in JOC, making 43 Air School an
effective holder of 75% of shares in JOC.
[4]
The respondent in the matter is AIG, South Africa Limited (AIG), an
insurance company.
[5]
43 Air School was the main operating management entity within the 43
Air School group. It held short
term insurance which included
business interruption insurance cover with the respondent for the
period 1 July 2019 to 30 June 2020,
arranged by Marsh (Pty) Ltd
(Marsh) who was the insurance broker and the underwriter in respect
of the policy with AIG. The policy
ran from 1 July to 30 June every
year and had been in place for a number of years. The applicants were
required to complete an
insurance renewal questionnaire transcribing
the insurance values for each year. The second applicant did so for
2019 to 2020 on
behalf of the group. The updated questionnaire was
submitted on 7 June 2019 to Marsh to forward it to AIG.
[6]
The policy covered business interruption and the applicants referred
to the specific definitions in
the policy which included definitions
of the “business” and the “premises” and a
“defined event”
for the purpose of business interruption:
“
SPECIFIC
DEFINITIONS
Business shall mean any
activity of the insured
Premises shall mean any
premises used for the purpose of the insured.
And
EXTENDED DAMAGE
The Defined event extends
to include:
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
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 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 or impose quarantine regulations or
restrict access to any place. “
[7]
The policy also required claims to be submitted within a particular
period under its reporting of claims
clause as follows:
“
SPECIFIC
CONDITIONS
2 CLAIMS
On the happening of any
defined event in consequence of which a claim may be made under this
section the insured shall in addition
to complying with General
condition 1- Reporting of claims and General Condition 2 –
Insurers rights with due diligence do
and concur in doing and permit
to be done all things that may be reasonably practicable to minimise
or check any interruption of
or interference with the Business or to
avoid or diminish the loss and in the event of a claim being made
under this section, shall
at their own expense (subject to the
provisions of General Extension 1-Claims Preparation Costs) deliver
to the insurer in writing
a statement setting forth particulars of
their claim together with details of all other insurance covering the
loss or any part
of it or consequential loss of any kind resulting
therefrom. No claim under this section shall be payable unless the
terms of this
Specific condition have been complied with and in the
event of non-compliance therewith in any respect, any payment on
account
of the claim already made shall be repaid to the insurer
forthwith”
[8]
43 Air School, PTC and JOC allege that in 2020, they suffered losses
as a result of the national lockdown
declared in terms of
Disaster
Management Act 57 of 2002
that came into effect on 26 March 2020. 43
Air School prepared and submitted a claim to the respondent under the
policy in March
2020. This claim was rejected by the respondent.
[9]
The applicant’s claims submitted to the respondent over the
period amounts to the sum of R4,130,926.
According to the applicants,
the scope and quantum of their claim stands to be revised to include
business interruption losses
that relate to PTC and JOC. They seek a
declaratory order to the effect that the respondent is liable to the
applicants under the
policy for the extent of their losses and to
direct and that the respondent engages meaningfully with the
applicants.
[10] The
applicants conduct their business in the field of aviation. 43 Air
School is based at Port Alfred and provides
pilot training and air
traffic control training from Port Alfred Aerodrome which is a
dedicated flight training company. It caters
for commercial, private
and general airline and military sectors. 43 Air School with a
purported extensive background in training,
offers training to
individuals, and corporate sponsored pilots from different
backgrounds. It also trains pilots from various countries
around the
world. PTC operates an airline pilot preparation service exclusively
for 43 Air School students and provides Boeing
737 and Airbus 320
flight training for newly qualified commercial pilots from their
Gqeberha premises which are owned by Green
Gecko Trading (Pty) Ltd
(Green Gecko). The shares in Green Gecko are owned by Holdings.
[11]
JOC owns and provides flight simulators for lease at the Gqeberha
premises which are owned by Green Gecko and utilised
by 43 Air School
for PTC training purposes. 43 Advanced, was a division operated by 43
Air School. It provided re-currency and
post-qualification training
for pilots at Lanseria until the end of June 2020 when it closed due
to the negative effects of the
Covid 19 pandemic. The applicant
indicated that 43 Air School provides the main administrative
management function for each of
the applicants. The pilot training
courses offered are extensive and include private and commercial
pilot license training. The
training also includes airline pilot
training that would lead to the integrated airline transport and
instructor rating training,
technical training, aircraft maintenance
and mechanic training. The training is either offered at Port Alfred
by 43 Air School
or by PTC using aircraft simulators owned by JOC.
The training is offered to the local as well as international market.
They also
conduct the training for the Vietnam Airline cadet program.
The organogram relied on by the applicant is marked “Annexure”
C below.
[12] The
respondent was the insurer of the applicant for several years, up to
June 2020. The premium including VAT was
R 467 342,98 per annum.
The policy covered business interruption for the amount of R
66 443 230.00 per annum. The
applicant was required to
complete a questionnaire at the beginning of each year relating to
the insurance required. The questionnaire
was completed as requested
by the insurer and updated and submitted for the period 2019 to 2020.
The insurance policy covered the
business and premises in Lanseria,
Port Alfred, and Gqeberha for assets to the value of R258,000,296.00
and in respect of cover
for business interruption in the amount of R
66 443, 230.00. The meaning of business interruption as described in
the policy is
relied upon by 43 Air School who was compelled to
changed its business location as it was fundamentally impacted by the
national
lockdown and Covid 19 disease was diagnosed within the 25 km
radius when the Lanseria business closed. The 43 Air School premises
based at the Port Alfred premises was also affected due to a defined
incident, namely the diagnosis of Covid 19 within the 25 km
radius
impacting PTC as well, it was submitted. The rejection of PTC’s
claim is not justified as a claim by PTC was accepted
in the past in
respect of a computer. JOC’s claim, the applicant submits, is
correctly submitted along with the other claims.
The applicants as
the insured submitted claims to the respondent’s claims
department in litigation.
[13] The
respondent rejected 43 Air school’s first claim for the period
26 April to 9 June 2020 as it contends
the national lockdown was not
in response to an incident of Covid 19 within the 25 km radius of
Port Alfred and the policy is not
a joint policy. Thus the case in
Gqeberha is not a trigger event for the second applicant to claim on
the policy. Its second claim
was not submitted prior to the launch of
this application and again the respondent indicates it is not a joint
policy. PTC’s
claim for the period 27 March 2020 to 1 June 2020
was rejected because the respondent asserted that it was not
submitted prior
to the launch of this application and PTC is not
insured under the policy. JOC’s claim was rejected because it
was not submitted
prior to the launch of this application. There is
no major opposition to JOC’s claim.
[14]
The issues for determination were agreed to be:
1.
Whether
PTC is an insured under the policy?
2.
Whether
the second third and fourth applicant are entitled to seek
declaratory relief by way of litigation where only the second
applicant submitted a claim for business interruption to the
respondent from 27 April 2020 -31 May 2020 which was rejected by the
respondent.
3.
Whether
the second applicant is entitled to indemnity under the insurance
policy for the period during which its business was interrupted
as a
result of the lockdown but where the outbreak of Covid 19 occurred
within the radial limit on a date after and could not have
been the
cause of the Government’s imposition of the lockdown imposed.
[15]
In
Guard
Risk Insurance Company v Café Chameleon
[1]
the
Court states the approach to interpreting insurance contracts:
“
This
Court recently restated the approach to interpreting insurance
contracts in Centriq v Oosthuizen:
“
[I]nsurance
contracts are contracts like any other and must be construed by
having regard to their language context, and purpose
in what is a
unitary exercise. A commercially sensible meaning is to be adopted
instead of one that is insensible or that is at
odds with the purpose
of the contract. The analysis is objective and is aimed at
establishing what the parties must be taken to
have intended, having
regard to the words they used in the light of the document as a whole
and of the factual matrix within which
they concluded the contract”
[13] In this
analysis it must be borne in mind that insurance contracts are
“contracts of indemnity”. They
should therefore be
interpreted "reasonably and fairly to this end". In this
regard it is instructive to recall Schreiner
JA's adoption of the
following statement from the English authorities on insurance law:
"No
rule, in the interpretation of a policy, is more firmly established,
or more imperative and controlling, than that, in
all cases, it must be liberally construed in favour of the insured,
so as not to defeat without plain necessity his claim to indemnity,
which in making the insurance, it was his object to secure. When the
words are without violence, susceptible of two interpretations,
that
which will sustain the claim and cover the loss, must in preference
be adopted.”
[2]
whether the third
applicant is covered under the insurance policy?
[16] Counsel
for the applicants submitted that PTC was covered under the policy in
view of 43 Air School managing the
insurance for the group. The
respondent disputed this on the basis that there was no connection
between 43 Air School and PTC and
the policy made no reference to
PTC. Furthermore, PTC did not prove that it was covered under the
policy. He argued that the wording
of the policy is clear that
insurance is afforded to NAC, 43 Air School and subsidiary companies
“managed” and “controlled”
by NAC and 43 Air
School and for which they have authority to obtain insurance.
[17] Having
regard to the guidance in para[12] of
Guardrisk
and its
reference to
Centriq v Oosthuisen
to have regard to the
language, context and purpose of insurance contracts in a unitary
manner, I have considered the respondent’s
admission in
paragraph 80 of the answering affidavit where it states as follows:
“
I
admit that AIG was the insurer of NAC and 43 Air School (Pty) Ltd and
their respective subsidiary companies, managed, controlled,
member
companies,….and any other persons or entities for which they
have authority to insure, jointly or severally each
for their
respective right or interests) for many years.”
[18]
Counsel for the respondents argued that this was a factual
consideration and not a legal one. The court had to
consider whether
the applicants had a joint interest. Counsel for the respondent
submitted further, that it was incorrect to say
that the businesses
were inter –related. Having regard to the organogram he pointed
out that Holdings was the overarching
company. 43 Air School had no
shareholder relationship with PTC. This relationship was only between
43 Air School and JOC when
regard was had to the applicants’
organogram
[3]
. The NAC replaced
by Holdings in the organogram. Counsel pointed out further that PTC
was a subsidiary of Holdings and not of 43
Air School and 43 Air
School could not have arranged insurance for PTC as a subsidiary.
[19] To the
contrary, counsel for the applicants referred to the annexures,
indicating it is evident that the insurance
for the period from July
2019 was renewed as a composite insurance policy including NAC and 43
Air School (Pty) Ltd. The annexures
completed by the deponent and
submitted to Marsh reflect property belonging to PTC and JOC. It
followed that they were included
in the policy.
[20] Having
regard to the facts and considering the documents which are attached
as annexures which include the questionnaire
concluded by Shaun
Musson, the director of the applicants, as well as the email
correspondence concluded prior to the renewal of
the 2019 policy,
reference is made to NAC and 43 Air School (Pty) Ltd and the
admission is made that there was a history of covering
both NAC and
43 Air School, including subsidiary companies which are managed and
controlled. This would include Holdings and its
subsidiaries and 43
Air School and its subsidiaries. This includes both PTC and JOC. My
view is reinforced by the reference to
specific items listed for
cover belonging to PTC and JOC and the undisputed evidence that the
respondent paid out a claim submitted
by PTC previously. This in the
light of their admission in paragraph [80] leads me to the conclusion
that PTC was covered under
the policy.
whether the second third
and fourth respondents are entitled to interdictory relief where only
second respondent submitted a claim
[21]
The second applicant submitted its first claim for the period 27
April -31 May 2020. This claim was rejected for
the reasons indicated
above and based on the principle that 43 Air School’s claim for
the period 26 -30 April 2020 was due
to the lockdown and was not in
response to a Covid 19 occurrence within a 25 km radius of the
business premises in Port Alfred.
The second reason the claim was
rejected was because the policy is not a joint policy and an
occurrence of an incidence of Covid
19 in Gqeberha was not within 25
km of Port Alfred. The third and fourth applicants’ claims were
rejected because they failed
to comply with the submission of claim
as per a condition of the policy
[4]
prior
to approaching the court for relief, thereby depriving the
respondents of their contractual rights to investigate the claims.
There was an indication that the fourth applicant has a claim. There
was a possibility that the third applicant’s claim would
be
considered provided the third applicant could prove it was insured.
This court’s finding above indicates the third applicant
was
insured.
Joint and composite
policy
[22] The
question whether the applicants are entitled to declaratory relief is
best answered by considering whether
the policy was composite or
considering whether the business was impacted by a defined event at
Gqeberha.
[23] Counsel
for the respondent pointed out that claims were subject to a time
clause for example General Condition
1(b) provided time limitations
which stated that “no claim is payable after the expiry of
twenty four months or such further
time as the insurer may in writing
allow unless the claim is the subject of litigation still to be
assessed or is a claim under
the business interruption section of the
policy”. The respondent rejected the claim of the second
applicant on the strength
of this clause. This necessitated the
present application to enable the applicants to submit and negotiate
claims in terms of the
policy.
[24] Counsel
for the respondent argued that the applicants are separate juristic
companies and carry on business at
different places. Thus it was
argued they cannot rely on the policy to claim for the same incident.
[25] He
argued that the question of the policy covering all the companies
required the court to determine whether the
policy was a composite
one. In considering this reference he referred to the description of
“the business” of the insured
as well as the terms
“business interruption”, “defined event”,
“premises”. The respondents
admitted in paragraph 80 they
have covered the applicants for a number of years. The insured
admitted covering the applicants as
follows: ”
National
Airways Corporation (Pty) Limited and 43 Air School (Pty) Ltd and
subsidiary companies managed, controlled member companies
,
joint venture sports, social and recreational clubs, and societies
and any other persons or entities for which they have they
have
authority to insure, jointly or severally each for their respective
right or interests) for many years.”
Thus, to make a
determination whether the policy was a composite one, counsel
submitted, was a factual determination. Having regard
to the
insurance policy, it is evident that it refers to companies which are
managed and controlled as well as subsidiaries which
are clearly
under the control of Holdings which replaced NAC and 43 Air School
which manages some subsidiaries and arranges insurance.
[26]
A further consideration is the factual consideration whether the
parties are impacted by the loss where there is
a defined event.
There was an incident of Covid 19 within the 25 km radius of JOC and
PTC’s premises in Gqeberha. It was
argued this did not qualify
43 Air School’s claims. The respondent based its decision on an
understanding of a joint and
composite policy and description of the
insured’s business. Counsel referred to MacGillavray
[5]
“
There
can be no joint insurance policy unless the interests of the several
persons who are interested in the subject matter are
joint interests
so that they are exposed to the same risk and will suffer a joint
loss by the occurrence of an insured peril….
The interests of
such co-insureds are so inseparably connected that a loss or benefit
must necessarily affect them both ”
…
..
“
It
is usual to describe the co-insured in a composite policy as being
insure for “their respective rights and interests”
but a
policy lacking that wording may nonetheless be construed as
composite”
[6]
[27] In the
above paragraph it is evident that the wording used to identify a
composite policy is found in the description
of the definition of the
insured namely “
they have authority to insure,
jointly
or severally
each for their
respective right or
interests
.”(my emphasis).
In addition to the
description which define the elements, the event which impacted the
one facility has an impact on the other
facilities as well. The
respondent did not dispute the applicants’ version regarding
the losses suffered or that the business
interruption of one facility
did not impact the other. Having regard to the description of
training services offered it is apparent
that the facilities are
inter related and supportive.
[28]
Aviation is a specialised training area. The applicants describe in
their founding affidavit how they offer training
programmes at Port
Alfred and Gqeberha. Some of the training such as the cadet training
is conducted partly at Port Alfred and
partly as Gqeberha. It is
evident that an interruption at one site will impact the other site.
On reading the policy “the
business” is all of the places
where business is conducted and is a factual determination. There is
nothing to gainsay the
version put forward by the applicants in the
founding affidavit regarding the conduct of training. In
Guard
Risk
[7]
,
the Court referred to the flexible common sense approach to be
adopted over strict logic in insurance contracts to give effect
to
the intention of parties in a contract:
“
The commonlaw test is thus applied flexibly, recognising that “common
sense may
have to prevail over strict logic” in the contractual
context it has long been accepted that causation rules should be
applied
“with good sense to give effect to, and not to defeat
the intention of the contracting parties”.19 For insurance
contracts
the question always is:”[H] as the event, on which I
put my premium, actually occurred?”
[40] Of relevance in the
instant case is that they may be more than one cause or multiple
causes giving rise to a claim. In that
case “the approximate
for actual or effective cause (it matters not what term is used) must
be ascertained…”21
even if a loss is “not felt as
the immediate result of the peril insured against, but occurs after a
succession of other
causes, the peril remains the proximate cause of
the loss, as long as there is no break in the chain of causation.”
22 A
proximate cause should be identified as a matter of reality,
predominance [and] efficiency”. Put differently the real or
dominant cause is ascertained by applying good business sense.
I am thus persuaded that
the third and fourth applicants should, in line with the common sense
approach that the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Guardian Risk
provides, be afforded relief. Especially as where they shared the
same facilities to conduct training and for support and ongoing
or
secondary training. Not to do so would lead to an absurdity which the
insurer (reasonably) and so too insured in this case the
applicants,
did not contemplate.
Order
[29] For the
reasons above, I make the following order:
1.
The
respondent is liable to compensate the second, third and fourth
applicants in respect of business interruption insurance cover,
for
the period 27 March 2020 to 31 May 2020.
2.
The
respondent is directed to engage the second, third and fourth
applicants meaningfully for the purposes of quantifying the monetary
value of the claims of each of the second, third and fourth
applicants for compensation in respect of business interruption
insurance
for the period from 27 March 2020 to 31 May 2020.
3.
The respondent to pay the applicants’ costs.
S C MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the applicant:
Adv
KJ Van Huyssteen
Instructed
by:
Fluxmans
Inc
On
behalf of the respondents:
Adv
I Green SC
R
Ismail
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel
Date of hearing:
23 February 2022
Date of judgment:
20 February 2023
[1]
Guard
Risk Insurance Company v Café Chameleon
[2021] 1 All SA 707
(SCA)
[2]
At para [12]
[3]
See Annexure C above
[4]
Caselines
001-122,
General
Condition 1(a) (iii) and 001-152 Specific Condition 2
[5]
Birds
J, Lynch B, Paul S MacGillavray On Insurance Law – Relating to
All Risks Other than Marine
1-202
Sweet and Maxwell 4
th
Ed.
at
para1-202
[6]
As
above, para 1-204
[7]
Above para [39] –[40]
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