Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 729South Africa
Biologicals and Vaccines Institute of Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Guardrisk Insurance Company Limited (11323/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 729 (27 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Biologicals and Vaccines Institute of Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Guardrisk Insurance Company Limited (11323/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 729 (27 June 2023)
Biologicals and Vaccines Institute of Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Guardrisk Insurance Company Limited (11323/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 729 (27 June 2023)
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sino date 27 June 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
11323/2022
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
27.06.23
In the matter between:
THE
BIOLOGICALS AND VACCINES INSTITUTE OF
SOUTHERN
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
GUARDRISK
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Defendant
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The defendant, Guardrisk, insured the Plaintiff, the
Institute, against, amongst other things, damage to its property and
premises
caused by fire. There was a fire at the Institute, which
then made a claim on the policy it had with Guardrisk. Guardrisk
repudiated
the claim, and the Institute now sues challenging that
repudiation, and seeking what it says is due to it under the policy.
2
The Institute issued its combined summons on 5 August 2022,
and served the combined summons on Guardrisk on 10 August 2023. On 23
August 2022, Guardrisk gave notice of its intention to defend the
action. Guardrisk also issued a notice under Rule 30 (2) (b),
complaining that the combined summons was not signed in the manner
set out in Rule 18 (1). Rule 18 (1) requires that a combined
summons
“shall be signed by both an advocate and an attorney or, in the
case of an attorney who, under section 4(2) of the
Right of
Appearance in Courts Act, 1995 (Act No. 62 of 1995), has the right of
appearance in the Supreme Court, only by such attorney
or, if a party
sues or defends personally, by that party”. A combined summons
consists of a summons to appear to defend a
claim and a separate
document setting out the particulars of that claim. The summons to
appear was signed by the Institute’s
attorney, but the copy of
the particulars of claim issued and served on Guardrisk was not
signed at all. This rendered the combined
summons an irregular step.
Guardrisk asked the Institute to remove the cause of its complaint,
failing which Guardrisk would apply
to set the combined summons
aside.
3
It turns out that the particulars of claim had in fact been
prepared and signed by two counsel and by the Institute’s
attorney.
But, as a result of a series of mishaps, the signatures the
Institute’s attorney and counsel supplied did not make their
way onto the document that was actually issued by the Registrar and
served on Guardrisk.
4
It seems to me that, had the Institute’s attorney simply
delivered a copy of the signed particulars of claim to Guardrisk’s
attorney when he received the Rule 30 (2) (b) notice, that should
have been the end of the matter. Rule 18 (12) states that “if
a
party fails to comply with [Rule 18 (1)] such pleading shall be
deemed to be an irregular step and the opposite party shall be
entitled to act in accordance with rule 30”. That is what
Guardrisk did. Rule 30 does no more than entitle a party to complain
about the form of a pleading and require that the cause of the
complaint be removed. In this case, that meant that a signed version
of the particulars had to be provided. The scheme set up in Rule 18
(12) is at least in part designed to avoid the excessive formality
and point-taking that can mar condonation proceedings, and to enable
to parties to get on with the litigation by curing
between
themselves
any prejudice caused by formally defective
pleading.
The condonation
application
5
However, the Institute’s attorney instead took the more
cautious step of applying for condonation for the Institute’s
non-compliance with Rule 18 (1). That is the application presently
before me.
6
The application for condonation was also cursed. In his
founding affidavit, the Institute’s attorney did not explicitly
address
the Institute’s prospects of success in the main
action. This omission formed a major plank of Guardrisk’s
opposition
to the application. In an effort to cure the omission, the
Institute’s attorney deposed to a supplementary affidavit and
an application for leave to file it. That application was also
opposed, and is also now before me for determination.
7
The test applicable to applications for condonation is so
well-known it barely needs repeating. A court considers the nature
and
degree of non-compliance with a rule, the explanation for that
non-compliance, any prejudice caused by the non-compliance, and the
applicant’s prospects of success in the main case. Each of
these considerations is weighed with the aim of promoting the
interests of justice on the facts of each matter, which is a court’s
fundamental pre-occupation (
Grootboom v National Prosecuting
Authority
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC) paragraph 22).
8
The degree of non-compliance in this case is miniscule. The
Institute’s attorney and counsel signed the combined summons,
but the signed version did not make its way to the Registrar or to
Guardrisk. What Guardrisk received was a summons signed by the
Institute’s attorney, and a set of particulars of claim that
were not signed by anyone. There is no dispute, however, that
the
Institute’s attorneys and counsel prepared the particulars and
that electronic versions of the pages bearing each relevant
person’s
signature were assembled and ready to be issued as part of the
combined summons. However, because of what appears
to have been a
very minor administrative oversight, the document went out without
the signature pages attached to it. What I am
asked to condone is,
therefore, not the failure of the Institute to ensure that the
combined summons was signed, but its failure
to send the signed
version of the particulars of claim to the Registrar and to
Guardrisk.
9
The explanation for the non-compliance was effectively that
the combined summons comprised a number of different documents
produced
by different people. These were assembled by the Institute’s
attorney’s personal assistant to be uploaded to this court’s
electronic registry, Court Online. It seems that the attorney’s
signature page was missed by a scanner, and that counsel’s
signatures do not appear on the particulars of claim because the
signatures were included in the electronic version of the document
as
“mark-ups”. The printer that produced the document was,
however, set only to print the document without its “mark-ups”.
Either the Institute’s attorney, or his personal assistant,
apparently did not check the final scanned version of the combined
summons which was then issued by being uploaded to Court Online, and
served on Guardrisk by the Sheriff.
10
Anyone who has ever spent hours standing over a photocopying
machine or labouring over the formatting settings of a word
processing
or digital document formatting programme can readily
understand what went wrong. Guardrisk’s challenge to the
adequacy of
this explanation was ultimately limited to berating the
Institute’s attorney for his oversight. That approach was
uncharitable.
It was also beside the point. Explanations for
non-compliance need only be honest. They do not have to be
impressive. As long as
it is frank, and sufficiently detailed, an
explanation for non-compliance need not present those in default as
faultless heroes,
thwarted by the vicissitudes of life. An
explanation for non-compliance that involves ineptness, a degree of
slovenliness, or even
downright stupidity may nonetheless be
acceptable so long as the degree of negligence involved does not
suggest that the non-compliance
was reckless, or that an absence of
diligence was so gross as to border on malicious dereliction.
None of that is in evidence
here.
11
Much of the oral hearing of this matter was taken up with a
debate about the prejudice, if any, that Guardrisk has suffered as a
result of the Institute’s failure to issue and serve a signed
set of particulars. It was suggested in the papers that the
combined
summons as served was somehow so defective as not to constitute the
kind of “legal process” necessary to interrupt
prescription or to comply with the time-bar clause in the insurance
policy. That seemed to be setting up an argument either that
the
unsigned combined summons was a nullity incapable of condonation, or
that condoning the failure to deliver a signed combined
summons would
deprive Guardrisk of a defence available to it under the
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
, or under the time-bar clause of the insurance policy.
12
However, Mr. Ferreira, who appeared for Guardrisk, accepted
that an unsigned combined summons is not a nullity, and that the
Institute’s
service of the unsigned combined summons
interrupted prescription. But Mr. Ferreira did not accept that the
service of an unsigned
combined summons satisfied the time-bar clause
in the insurance policy. He argued that condoning the service of an
unsigned combined
summons would prejudice Guardrisk, because it would
mean that Guardrisk cannot rely on a putative breach of the time-bar
clause
embodied in the failure to serve a signed set of particulars
within the period the clause prescribes.
13
However, I do not think the needle can be threaded in that
way.
Section 15
(1) of the
Prescription Act states
that the running
of prescription is interrupted “
by the
service on the debtor of any process whereby the creditor claims
payment of the debt”. Section 15 (6) of the Act defines
“process” as including “a petition, a notice of
motion, a
rule nisi
,
a pleading in reconvention, a third party notice referred to in any
rule of court, and any document whereby legal proceedings
are
commenced”. Mr. Ferreira accepted, in my view correctly, that
the unsigned particulars were “process” in
this sense.
14
The time-bar clause in the insurance policy
states that “[n]o claim shall be payable unless [the Institute]
claims payment
by serving legal process on [Guardrisk] within [180
days] of the rejection of the claim in writing and pursues such
proceedings
to finality”. Mr. Ferreira argued that an unsigned
set of particulars in a combined summons is not “legal process”
for the purposes of this clause. He suggested that what is meant in
the policy is legal process that is correctly drafted in every
respect.
15
Mr. Ferreira could offer no authority for that proposition,
and I do not think that it is correct. The time-bar clause in the
contract
must be read purposively and in context. The purpose of the
clause is to give timeous notice to Guardrisk that the insured person
is suing it. That requires two things: first that the process is
served within the required period, and second that the process
effectively institutes the claim. It seems to me that, if it is
accepted, as it must be, that the Institute’s combined summons
interrupted the running of prescription, then it must also be
accepted that the combined summons constituted “legal process”
within the meaning of time-bar clause in the insurance policy.
16
It follows from all of this that condoning the failure to
deliver the signed particulars of claim to the Registrar and to
Guardrisk
would not deprive Guardrisk of a contractual defence based
on the time-bar clause, because Guardrisk did not have such a defence
in the first place, or at least not a defence of the nature that was
argued before me. Guardrisk has therefore not identified any
appreciable prejudice it will suffer from the grant of condonation. I
remain agnostic on any other point that may in future be
raised in
reliance on the policy or its time-bar provisions.
17
It is of course virtually impossible to make a meaningful
assessment of the Institute’s prospects of success at this
stage.
The most that can be said is that the claim is good on its
face. But we know that the claim will be defended, that the facts
alleged
may be disputed, that new facts that would defeat the claim
may be pleaded and proved, and that Guardrisk may well advance legal
contentions in the face of which the claim cannot succeed. Given that
I have no idea what these factual disputes and averments
or legal
contentions will be, I am bound to find that the Institute has
reasonable prospects of success unless its particulars
of claim are
obviously excipiable. Nobody suggests that they are.
The supplementary
affidavit
18
That conclusion renders the Institute’s supplementary
affidavit superfluous, because there is nothing relevant in that
affidavit
that I cannot glean from the particulars of claim
themselves. I will nonetheless admit the supplementary affidavit, not
least because
there was no meaningful opposition to it. Guardrisk did
file a notice raising what it called questions of law in terms of
Rule
6 (5) (d) (iii). But the notice amounted to no more than an
attack on the apparent failure of the deponent to the supplementary
affidavit to address specifically a wide range of factors that have
been held relevant to the exercise of my discretion to admit
further
affidavits. The failure to rehearse the ten factors listed in the
Rule 6 (5) (d) (iii) notice does not render the application
defective. They can be (and were) addressed in written argument to
the extent that they are relevant – and they will not,
in any
event, be relevant in every case. There is accordingly no merit in
Guardrisk’s attempt to elevate the recital of those
factors to
a rule of pleading.
19
In all these circumstances, the interests of justice in this
case cry out for condonation to be granted, and for the claim to
proceed
and be adjudicated on the real issues between the parties.
Costs
20
Mr. Green, who appeared with Mr. Ainslie, for the Institute,
asked for condonation to be granted with costs on the scale as
between
attorney and client. He argued that Guardrisk’s
approach throughout has been to delay the progress of the claim by
taking
minor technical points that have no merit. For his part, Mr.
Ferreira emphasised that the Institute seeks an indulgence and in
those circumstances it should pay Guardrisk’s costs, even if it
is successful.
21
Finding myself at the end of a judgment which is far longer
than any written decision granting condonation on these facts should
ever have to be, I am sympathetic to the gloss Mr. Green places on
the facts. However, I do not think a punitive costs order is
justified, reserved as that sanction is for forms of litigious
misconduct which are not evident in this case.
22
That does not mean that Guardrisk’s opposition was
reasonable. On the facts, its opposition to the condonation
application
was plainly unreasonable, and Guardrisk should pay the
costs of the application on the ordinary scale. The application
should never
have been opposed. Nor did the application justify the
appointment of senior counsel by either party. My costs order will
reflect
that.
23
For all these reasons –
23.1 The
plaintiff’s failure to issue and serve a set of particulars of
claim signed in the manner required by Rule
18 (1) is condoned.
23.2 The plaintiff
must lodge with the Registrar of this Court, and deliver to the
defendant’s attorneys, the signature
pages of its particulars
of claim, as signed by the plaintiff’s counsel and attorney on
4 August 2022, and annexed as “DWB7”
and DWB4” to
the plaintiff’s founding affidavit, by no later than 30 June
2023.
23.3 The time
period prescribed in Rule 22 (1) will commence on the first court day
following the plaintiff’s compliance
with the order in
paragraph 23.2.
23.4 The defendant
is to pay the costs of this application.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was
prepared by Judge Wilson. It is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties or their legal representatives
by email,
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 27 June
2023.
HEARD ON: 20 June 2023
DECIDED ON: 27 June 2023
For
the Plaintiff:
IP
Green SC
D
Ainslie
Instructed
by
David
Bayliss Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
E
Ferreira SC
Instructed
by
Engelbrecht
Attorneys Inc
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