Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 371South Africa
Hollard Insurance Company Ltd and Others v Insure Group Management Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (21/43014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 371 (25 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 April 2023
Headnotes
liable to countless other creditors of the company to which they have no relationship – Exceptions upheld.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hollard Insurance Company Ltd and Others v Insure Group Management Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (21/43014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 371 (25 April 2023)
Hollard Insurance Company Ltd and Others v Insure Group Management Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (21/43014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 371 (25 April 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Exception – Delictual claim –
Against auditor and compliance officer of company
– Alleged
that company appropriated premiums due to insurers –
Insurers claiming damages – Whether legal
duties owed to
company or to plaintiffs – Risk of being held liable to
countless other creditors of the company to
which they have no
relationship – Exceptions upheld.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION JOHANNESBURG
Case no.
:
21/43014
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
25.04.23
In
the matter between:
THE
HOLLARD INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
SANTAM
LIMITED
BRYTE
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
CONSTANTIA
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
GUARDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
OLD
MUTUAL INSURE LIMITED
NEW
NATIONAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
1
st
PLAINTIFF
2
nd
PLAINTIFF
3
rd
PLAINTIFF
4
th
PLAINTIFF
5
th
PLAINTIFF
6
th
PLAINTIFF
7
th
PLAINTIFF
And
INSURE
GROUP MANAGERS LIMITED (in liquidation)
HOWARTH LEVETON
BONER
COMPLIANCE
MONITORING SYSTEMS CC
1
st
DEFENDANT
2
nd
DEFENDANT
3
rd
DEFENDANT
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of hearing:
date of hearing:
10 & 11 October 2022
Date
of delivery of judgment:
25 April 2023
Neutral
Citation
:
The Hollard Insurance Company Ltd and Others vs
Insure Group Management Ltd (in liquidation) and Others
(case No:
2021/43014) [2023]
ZAGPJHC 371 (25 April
2023)
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is an exception application
brought by the second and third defendants against the plaintiff’s
Particulars of Claim.
[2]
The matter concerns the collection of
premiums due to short-term insurers in terms of short-term insurance
policies. The plaintiffs
(the Insures) have issued summons against
the first defendant (the Intermediary) second defendant (the Auditor)
and the third defendant
as (the Compliance Officer).
TEST FOR EXCEPTION
[3]
In dealing with the exception it is trite
that the pleadings must be looked at as a whole. An excipient must
show that the pleading
is excipiable on every possible interpretation
that can reasonably be attached to it.
[4]
The test on exception is whether on all
reasonable readings of the facts pleaded, no cause of action maybe be
made out.
[5]
The well-established principle of our law
is that the
onus
rest upon the excipient who alleges that a summons discloses no cause
of action or is vague and embarrassing. The duty rest upon
the
excipient to persuade the court that the pleading is excipiable on
every interpretation that can reasonably be attached to
it.
[6]
In
H
v Fetal Assessment Center,
[1]
the Court said
"The
test on an exception is whether, on all possible readings of the
facts, no cause of action may be made out. It is for
the excipient to
satisfy the court that the conclusion of law from which the plaintiff
contends cannot be supported on every interpretation
that can be put
upon the facts.”
[7]
The trite principle of our law is that an
excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to the stated grounds
of his exception,
[8]
In
Luke
M Tembani and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Another
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal set out the general principle relating to
and the approach to be adopted regarding the adjudication
of
exceptions as follows; “
Whilst
exceptions provide a useful mechanism to weed out cases without legal
merit, it is nonetheless necessary that they be dealt
with sensibly
(
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority
SA [
2005] ZASCA 73
;
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) para 3). It is where
pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to determine the nature
of the claim, or where pleadings
are bad in law that their contents
do not support a discernible and legally recognised cause of action,
that exception is competent
(
Cilliers
et al Hebstein and Van Winsen the Practice of the High Courts of
South Africa
5ed
Vol 1 at 631
;
Jowel v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 386
(W) at 899E-F). the burden rests on an excipient, who must
establish that on every interpretation that can reasonably be
attached
to it, the pleading is excipiable
(Ocean
Echo Properties 327 CC and Another v Old Mutual Life Insurance
Company (South Africa) Ltd
[2018]
ZASCA 9
;
2018 (3) SA 405
(SCA) para 9). The test is whether on all
possible readings of the fact no cause of action may be made out; it
being for the excipient
to satisfy the court that the conclusion of
law for which the plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every
interpretation that
can be put upon the facts
(Trustees
for the Time Being of the Children’s Resources Centre Trust and
Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012]
ZASCA 182
;
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA);
2013 (3) BCLR 279
(SCA);
[2013] 1
All SA 648
(SCA) para 36 (
Children’s
Resource Centre Trust).”
[9]
The
test applicable in deciding exceptions based on vagueness and
embarrassment are now well established and have been consistently
applied by our Courts. In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank,
[3]
it was held at (201-211) that an exception to a pleading of it being
vague and embarrassing involves two primary considerations
namely;
9.1 whether
it is vague, and;
9.2 whether
it causes embarrassment of such a nature that the excipient is
prejudiced
[10]
The
Trope
decision was approved in
Jowell
v Bramwell –Jones,
[4]
at 899-903. In the Jowell – judgment it was also held that it
was incumbent upon a plaintiff to plead a complete cause of
action
that identifies the issues upon which it seeks to rely and on which
evidence will be led in an intelligible, lucid form
that allows the
defendant to plead to it.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[11]
The facts underlying this dispute are
largely common cause.
[12]
The plaintiffs are insurance companies who
provide short-term insurance to cover a number of policyholders,
instituted action against
the defendants for damages the plaintiffs
alleged they suffered as a result of the collapse of the first
defendant.
[13]
The first defendant (IGM) presently in
liquidation, rendered Intermediary Services to the plaintiffs, the
short-term insurers.
[14]
The Intermediary Services included the
collection and accounting for premiums paid by policyholders under
short-term insurance policies
on behalf of the plaintiffs. After
paying the necessary third parties, the first defendant was obliged
to pay the balance of the
remaining premiums to the plaintiffs.
[15]
In rendering the Intermediary Services, the
first defendant was required to provide security in respect of its
obligation to short–term
insurers, including the plaintiffs in
accordance with the relevant regulations under the Short-Term
Insurance Act.
[16]
During
the same period, the second defendant (Howarth) was the statutorily
appointed auditor of the first defendant and was also
its appointed
auditor under section 19 (1) of the Financial Advisory and
Intermediary Act,
[5]
(FAIS).
[17]
The third defendant was the compliant
officer of the first defendant, appointed in terms of section 17 of
FAIS.
[18]
The plaintiffs allege that during the
relevant period, IGM unlawfully appropriated the value of
approximately two months' worth
of Premiums and that IGM invested
those Premiums in illiquid assets.
[19]
The plaintiffs further allege that the
alleged misappropriation resulted in the first defendant failing to
maintain an adequate
balance sheet for purposes of maintaining the
IGF Guarantee, the IGF refusing to issue an IGF Guarantee for the
period after August
2918 and IGM failing to pay the amounts then due
to the plaintiffs in terms of the Mandates on 15 September 2018.
[20]
Accordingly, the plaintiffs are thus
creditors of the first defendant, who plead that they have suffered
loss caused by the first
defendant’s conduct.
[21]
The plaintiffs have sued the first
defendant in contract and have sued the second and third defendants
in delict.
[22]
The second and third defendants delivered a
notice in terms of Uniform Rule 23 (1) to the plaintiff's particulars
of claim, on the
basis that the particulars of claim do not disclose
a cause of action and or are vague and embarrassing.
[23]
Subsequent to the delivery of the second
and third defendant's notice in terms of Rule 23(1) of the Uniform
Rules, the plaintiffs
delivered a notice of intention to amend their
particulars of claim. The third defendant delivered a notice of
objection to the
amendment in terms of rule 28(3).
SECOND DEFENDANT
EXCEPTION
[24]
The plaintiff's claim against the second
defendant is premised on two distinct auditing functions.
[25]
The two distinct auditing functions are
common cause between the parties and are not in dispute.
[26]
The first function is what is termed
statutory audits.
26.1
Companies are required in terms of the Companies Act
[6]
to appoint an auditor to express an opinion on the financial
statements of the company that were drawn by the board of directors.
26.2 The second
function relates to auditors having assumed to perform various
non-audit functions which, as result had statutory
duties imposed on
them. This amongst others has imposed a duty to report to regulators
about aspects of regulatory compliance and
the probity of the affairs
of the companies under report.
[27]
The second defendant raises this exception
in relation to the plaintiff's reliance on the first function.
Howarth’s main complaint
is on the claim based on the audit
function which, in addition to the statutory claim, relies upon a
further separate cause of
action, being a delictual claim for pure
economic loss caused by the alleged negligent performance by Howarth
of its duties as
auditor. The second defendant avers that the
plaintiff has not pleaded the Delictual Claim as a self-standing
separate claim.
[28]
The second defendant’s main exception
to the Delictual Claim is that a statutory auditor of a company owes
its legal duties
to the company itself and the company's shareholders
in general meetings and that a statutory auditor owes no legal duty
to creditors
and clients of the company that it audits, either to
protect their interest or for the benefit of their commercial
decisions.
[29]
It is further submitted by the second
defendant that it seeks to eliminate an impermissible reliance on a
delictual cause of action,
even though it is not separately
identified as a claim.
[30]
In sum, the second defendant submits that
the are two grounds on which it should be found that its alleged
negligent conduct was
not wrongful;-
30.1 in respect of
the IGM's annual financial statements, the second defendant owes a
legal duty to IGM and not to the plaintiffs.
30.2 If a legal
duty is recognised, it will raise the spectre of unlimited liability
and place an undue burden on Howarth.
[31]
In
their reply, the plaintiffs submit that their claim is not a pure
statutory claim. The plaintiffs admit that sections 45 and
46(7) of
the Auditing Profession Act,
[7]
(APA) do not provide them with a complete cause of action which may
be pursued independently of a delictual action based upon a
breach of
those provisions. That the cause of action remains delictual, but the
element of wrongfulness is
prima
facie
established by the breach of the statutory duty. Therefore, the
plaintiffs submit that their claim is not based on a breach of
contract but on the breach of a statutory duty.
[32]
As a result, the plaintiffs insist that the
allegations contained in their particulars of claim concerning
wrongfulness and the
existence of a legal duty, are necessary and
relevant and do not render the case of the plaintiffs against the
auditor excipiable.
[33]
The question to be answered in the second
defendant’s exception is whether the plaintiffs have not
pleaded the Delictual Claim
as a separate self-standing claim.
[34]
The common cause factor is that the
plaintiffs claim against the second and third defendants are based on
delict.
[35]
The principle of delict is now well settled
and eloquently set out by the court in
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC Department of Infrastructure
Development,
[8]
at [22] the Constitutional said “…
In
contrast to cases of physical harm, conduct causing pure economic
loss is not prima facie wrongful. Our law of delict protects
rights
and, in case of non-physical invasion, the infringement of rights may
not be as clearly apparent as in direct physical infringement.
There
is no general right not to be caused pure economic loss.
So our law is
generally reluctant to recognize pure economic loss claims,
especially where it would constitute an extension of the
law of risk
of liability in an indeterminate amount for an in determinate time to
an indeterminate class”.
AUDITORS
[36]
The principles relating to the liability of
auditors are now well established and have been enunciated in
numerous judgments.
[37]
Negligent misstatements by auditors have
been held by our courts not to be wrongful for the purposes of the
claims for pure economic
loss. In
Hlumisa
Investments Holdings(RF) Ltd and Another
v Kirkinis and Others
2020 (5) SA 419
(SCA) this principle was eloquently explained thus "
It
is universally accepted in common-law countries that auditors ought
not to bear liability simply because it might be foreseen
in general
that audit reports and financial statements are frequently used in
commercial transaction involving the party for whom
the audit was
conducted ( and audit reports completed) and third parties. In
general, auditors have no duty to third parties with
whom there is no
relationship or where the factors set out in the Standard Chartered
Bank
case
… are absent
. See also,
Magudwa
v KPMG Services (Pty) Limited
2021 (1)
SA 442
(GJ).
Cape Empowerment Trust Ltd
v Fisher Hoffman Sithole SA
2021 JDR
0920.
[38]
The law is clear in this regard,
auditors owe their legal duties to the companies they audit and not
to the company's shareholders.
To do so will in my view, as was held
in
Hlumisa
supra, “expose the auditors to liability in an undeterminable
amount for an undeterminable time to an undeterminable class”.
The Court went on and held “that if an action were to be
granted to claim compensation from wrongdoers, the Bank's creditors
would demand the same facility and particularly” as in our
present case if it [the company] is insolvent.
[39]
In my view, the second defendant's
exception has merit. This is so because the refusal of the exception
will expose the second defendant
to be liable to countless other
creditors of the first defendant to whom Howarth has no relationship
whatsoever. Therefore the
spectre of the second defendant being
liable to an undeterminable amount and undeterminable class will
become real.
[40]
Consequently, the second defendant
exception is upheld.
VAGUE AND EMBARRASSING
[41]
In this regard, the second defendant
submits that should it be found that the listed paragraphs do not
constitute a separate delictual
cause of action in negligence as
discussed supra then paragraphs 31,32,33,35,36,37,38,39 and 40 must
be found to be vague and embarrassing,
in that they rely upon
negligent breaches of audit duties, while it is not clear what the
relevance is of those allegations to
a cause of action based upon a
breach by the second defendant of section 45, read with section 46(7)
of the APA and amounts to
impermissible allegations.
[42]
In reply, the plaintiffs argue that the
alternative vague and embarrassing exception has no merit. That these
paragraphs are relevant
in respect of the second pathway and in
respect of the element of causation. Further that breaches by the
auditor of the relevant
legislation provide prima facie proof of
wrongfulness for purposes of a delictual claim.
[43]
For reasons set out above, this Court has
made a finding that the plaintiffs have not pleaded the Delictual
Claim as a self-standing
separate claim. As a result, the
above-mentioned allegations contained in the plaintiff's aforesaid
paragraphs listed in their
particulars of claim are thus found to be
vague and embarrassing.
THE PLAINTIFFS CLAIM
AGAINST THE THIRD DEFENDANT
[44]
The plaintiff's claim against the third
defendant is alleged to have arisen from the submission by the third
defendant of certain
compliance reports to the FAIS Regulator, in
which the third defendant is alleged to have made the following;
44.1 to have made
certain certifications concerning the first defendant's compliance
with its statutory obligations, which
were false, and
44.2 to have failed
to advise the FAIS Regulator of the first defendant’s failure
to comply with its statutory obligations.
[45]
The third defendant argues that the
plaintiff’s claim against the third defendant is for pure
economic loss which is not
prima face
wrongful. The plaintiffs must,
therefore, insist the third defendant, allege sufficient facts which
give rise to a legal duty owed
by the third defendant to the
plaintiffs. Further, the plaintiffs must also plead a legally
cognizable causal link between the
breach of such duty and the
damages allegedly suffered by the plaintiffs.
[46]
It was further submitted on behalf of the
third defendant that there is no reason to apply a contrary principle
to the position
of the third defendant in the present matter. That
there is a notable similarity of its position vis-a-vis the
plaintiffs to that
of an auditor. Therefore, insist the third
defendant that there is no contractual or any other relationship
between the third defendant
and the plaintiffs.
[47]
In their reply, the plaintiffs argue that
the compliance officer has the power and obligation to scrutinise the
affairs of the intermediary.
That the third defendant must insure
that the first defendant acts within the parameters set by law to
protect the interest of
the plaintiffs.
[48]
Further, the plaintiffs submit, that the
third defendant was aware of the first defendant's misdemeanors, that
the compliance officer
knew who the victims of the first defendant
were and the compliance officer failed to comply with its statutory
obligation and
report this non-compliance to FAIS. That a dangerous
situation was occurring in the form of the first defendant
misappropriating
the premiums which it collected on behalf of the
plaintiffs.
[49]
In sum, the plaintiffs submit that the
second defendant owed a legal duty to act positively and protect the
victims of the first
defendant’s client.
[50]
As is the case with the second defendant,
the plaintiff's claim against the compliance officer is founded on
delict. In my view,
the third defendant is in a similar position as
that of an auditor. The third defendant's obligation is to report any
misdemeanors
only to the Regulator. There is no legal duty owed by
the third defendant to the plaintiffs. The only duty that is placed
on the
shoulders of the third is to report any misdemeanors to the
Regulator.
[51]
Significantly, the plaintiffs have not
pleaded any facts which establish firstly that the third defendant
has a statutory obligation
owed to the plaintiffs. Second, the
plaintiffs have not pleaded a clear recognizable causal link between
the breach of such duty
and the damages, the plaintiffs allegedly
incurred.
[52]
Therefore, to place any obligation on the
third defendant will result as was held in
Du
Bruyn
that ‘First, cases of this
kind give rise to the twin dangers of numerous plaintiffs and
indeterminable liability.
[53]
In the result, the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim lack the averments necessary to sustain a cause
of action for the relief
the plaintiff's claim against the third
defendant. The third defendant exception is allowed.
SECOND COMPLAINT
[54]
At the hearing of the application, the
third defendant did not persist with its third complaint. The third
defendant's second complaint
relates to paragraph 50 of the
plaintiff's particulars of claim. "
Had
the third defendant not breached its duty as aforesaid, the FAIS
Regulator would have taken the appropriate steps against the
first
defendant, including advising the plaintiff of the first defendant's
failure to comply with its duties
.”
[55]
The third defendant challenges this
allegation and insists that the plaintiffs do not set out what would
have come of being notified
as alleged and how being so notified
would have prevented the loss suffered by the plaintiff.
[56]
The third defendant's complaint has merit.
The plaintiffs have not pleaded succinctly and showed a clear causal
link between the
failure of the complainant officer to report the
first defendant's misdemeanors to the Regulator and what precise
steps would the
Regulator taken to prevent the plaintiff's losses.
This exception is allowed.
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE
TO AMEND
[57]
The third defendant has served a notice to
remove the cause of complaint in terms of Rule 23(1) Uniform Rules.
The plaintiffs gave
notice of amendment which it proposed to effect
to their particulars of claim and it sought to remove the third
defendant's cause
of complaint. The third defendant in addition
to filing an exception also delivered a notice of objection to the
plaintiff's
proposed amendments. At the hearing of the application,
the third defendant submitted that it was no longer proceeding with
the
first and third objections and advised that its fourth objection
mirrors its first complaint.
SECOND OBJECTION
[58]
In sum, the third defendant argues that the
plaintiff's particulars of claim do not disclose the source of the
alleged obligations
of the third defendant but that these obligations
mirror those that are contained in the provisions of section 2 of the
FI Act.
Therefore the plaintiffs have not pleaded;-
58.1 the basis upon
which it is alleged that the FI Act finds application.
58.2 the basis upon
which it is alleged that to render the intermediary services, the
first defendant had to comply with the
FI Act.
58.3 that the third
defendant is defined as an entity as contemplated in section 2 of the
FI Act.
[59]
It is contended by the plaintiffs that it
is unclear if the amendment is granted the relevant paragraphs would
render the particulars
of claim vague and embarrassing or that they
would disclose no cause of action. That the third defendant does not
allege and show
that it would suffer prejudice if the amendment were
granted.
[60]
In my view, the proposed amendment does not
amount to a separate claim. The third defendant is allowed to plead
and deny that the
FI Act is applicable to it and further that it was
a financial institution or entity as defined in the FI Act.
Therefore, there
is no prejudice that will be suffered by the
third defendant if the amendment is allowed. Consequently, the third
defendant's
objection is dismissed.
[61]
Taking into account all the circumstances
of this case, the plaintiff's particulars of claim lack averments
which are necessary
to sustain an action against the second and third
defendants. The third defendan's objection is rejected.
[62]
I make the following order.
ORDER
1.
The second defendant’s exception is
upheld
2.
The third defendant’s exception is
upheld;
3.
The plaintiffs are entitled to amend their
particulars of claim within 20 (twenty) after the date of granting
this order;
4.
The third defendant's objection is
dismissed;
5.
The plaintiffs are ordered to pay the costs
of the second and third defendants, including the costs of two
counsels.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 10
&11 October 2022
Delivered:
25 April 2023
For
the Plaintiffs:
Mr
C.D.A Loxton SC
loxton@counsel.co.za
Mr.
P.F. Louw
gjkotze@counsel.co.za
Ms.
N. Ndlovu
ndlovu@counsel.co.za
instructed
by:
Edward
Classen & KAKA Attorneys
eddie@esckaka.com
lauren@esckaka.com
For
the 1
st
defendant:
(no
representation and no appearance)
For
the 2
nd
Defendant
:
M
du P. van der Nest SC
mvandernest@group621.co.za
F.R.
McAdam
faye.mcadam@group621.co.za
Instructed
by:
Fluxmans
Inc.
cstrime@fluxmans.com
BDuma@fluxmans.com
nnoomahomed@fluxmans.com
For
the 3
rd
Defendant:
D.J.
Mahon SC
mahon@law.co.za
Adv.
L Leeuw
leeuwlauren@gmail.com
instructed
by:
Terry
Mahon Attorneys
terry@terrymahon.co.za
[1]
2015
(2) SA 193 (CC)
[2]
[2022] ZASCA 70
(20 May 2022)
[3]
1992
(3) SA 208 (T)
[4]
1988
(1) SA 836 (W)
[5]
Act
32 of 2002
[6]
Act
71 0f 2008
[7]
Act
26 of 2005 as Amended
[8]
(CC)
2015 (1) SA 1(CC)
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