Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 745South Africa
Delpaul v Hollard Life Assurance Co Ltd (18301/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 745 (30 June 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Delpaul v Hollard Life Assurance Co Ltd (18301/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 745 (30 June 2023)
Delpaul v Hollard Life Assurance Co Ltd (18301/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 745 (30 June 2023)
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FLYNOTE:
CONTRACT
– Insurance – Repudiation – Benefit amount –
Suffered
a heart attack – Interpretation of policy – Percentage of
benefit amount entitlement – Hollard paid 25%
– Mr
Delpaul contends he is entitled to 100% of benefit amount – Mr
Delpaul understood the policy to pay out per event
– Whether
claim was for a related or an unrelated condition – No evidence
lead in this regard – Consideration
of express wording of
policy – Mr Delpaul is entitled to balance of payment under
claim in terms of policy – Judgment
granted for R1,736,437.50.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 18301/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
29/06/2023
In
the matter between:
NEIL
ERNEST DELPAUL
Plaintiff
and
HOLLARD
LIFE ASSURANCE CO. LTD
Defendant
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and time
for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 30 June 2023
JUDGMENT
INGRID
OPPERMAN J
Introduction
[1]
This
is a trial which traversed the interpretation of an insurance policy
and its application to an event which occurred on 15 August
2015 when
Mr Delpaul, the plaintiff, suffered an acute heart attack. Thereafter
he lodged a claim for payment in terms of a written
agreement of
insurance concluded with the defendant (
Hollard
).
Hollard interpreted the policy as entitling him to be paid 25% of the
Benefit amount. Quite how the appropriate percentage of
the Benefit
amount is to be determined is at the centre of this dispute. Hollard
paid him the amount that its interpretation of
the policy lead it to
conclude that he was due. Mr Delpaul takes issue with this
interpretation and contends that he is entitled
to 100% of the
Benefit amount.
[2]
The
percentage to which Mr Delpaul is entitled is dependent on the
interpretation
of the policy, the commencement date of which was 1
February 2012 (
the policy
).
The
common cause facts
[3]
The
following facts were, at the commencement of the trial, largely
common cause: Mr Delpaul had paid all his monthly premiums as
at the
date of the heart attack so the policy was in operation. His previous
claims history under the policy is as follows.
3.1.
In
April 2012 he submitted a claim under the Cardiovascular Benefit
Group for ischaemic heart disease and peripheral arterial disease
which resulted in a coronary stent and for which he was paid 10% of
the Benefit amount (
Event 1
).
3.2.
In
July 2012, Mr Delpaul submitted a claim for peripheral arterial
disease, which resulted in a bi-femoral bypass for which he was
paid
90% of the Benefit amount
(
Event 2
).
3.3.
On
15 August 2015 Mr Delpaul suffered the acute heart attack mentioned
in paragraph [1] of this judgment. For that he was paid out
25% of
the Benefit amount (
Event 3
).
The
Policy
[4]
The
policy provides that the ‘Benefit’ as specified in the
schedule
(
Benefit amount)
shall be payable if Mr Delpaul
suffers one of the
events
or conditions described in
the policy. The amount payable under the policy is expressed to be a
percentage of the Benefit
amount as reflected for each event. The
policy describes (under headings) 13 separate
Benefit Groups
.
By way of example, it mentions a Cardiovascular Benefit Group, a
Cancer Benefit Group and the 13th and last Benefit Group is a
‘Catch-all’ Benefit Group.
[5]
Each
Group identifies ‘Events’ under sub-headings. The
Cardiovascular
Benefit Group identifies 12 events and provides that
only one payment will be made per cardiovascular event with a single
event
being defined as all cardiovascular conditions or procedures
that occur within a 30 day period.
Evidence
presented
Mrs
Gonnerman – Hollard
[6]
The
Benefit amount at the time that the claim was instituted (had no
claims
been made prior thereto) was R 2 315 250 (
R 2,3 million
).
Hollard contends that the Benefit amount is static and upon each
claim being submitted under a particular Benefit Group, the
balance
reduces.
[7]
Hollard
called Ms Gonnerman, a senior claims manager, to provide context to
the policy. She explained that the Benefit amount would reduce by the
amount of any payment made and that the remaining balance
would be
available for further claims. The Benefit amount would reduce
according to the percentage pay-out of the event on which
the claim
is based until such time as there was no longer any benefit in
respect of events falling under that particular Benefit
Group. When
the 100% pay-out point is reached, the cover in respect of the events
falling under that Benefit Group would be endorsed
to reflect 100%
pay-out. The insured would then have to wait for 90 days for the
Benefit amount to be reinstated but it would be
limited to a pay-out
of 25% if made before Mr Delpaul reached 75 years of age and 15%
thereafter.
[8]
She
explained the reinstatement of the Benefit amount relevant to Mr
Delpaul’s
claim as follows: After 100% of the Benefit amount
was paid which occurred after Events 1 and 2, (both of which fell
within the
Cardiovascular Benefit Group) the Benefit amount
automatically reinstated after 90 days up to 25% (as Mr Delpaul was
younger than
75). She testified how Hollard had applied this
interpretation of the policy to Event 3, which also fell within the
Cardiovascular
Benefit Group.
[9]
In
April 2012, when Mr Delpaul submitted a claim for Event 1, the
pay-out
was made under the event described as ‘
Coronary
Angioplasty/Stent
’ where the amount of the pay-out is
reflected as ‘10% of Benefit Amount’ and this was paid.
The effect of this
claim and pay-out resulted in the Benefit amount,
under the rubric of Cardiovascular Benefit Group, reducing by 10%.
The amount
available under this Benefit Group was, according to Ms
Gonnerman, thus reduced to 90% of the Benefit amount. In July 2012,
Mr
Delpaul submitted a claim for Event 2 which resulted in a claim
under potentially two different Events being either
‘Coronary
Artery Disease with Surgery’
or
‘Surgery
of the Aorta
’. In each instance the amount payable was 100%
of the Benefit amount. At this stage, there was only 90% of the
Benefit amount
available and Mr Gonnerman explained that Mr Delpaul
was paid out the full balance i.e. the remaining 90%. After this
pay-out,
the policy was endorsed to record that his pay-out under the
Cardiovascular Benefit Group had been paid out 100% and this
triggered
90 days after the Event 2, a limited reinstatement of the
Benefit amount to 25% of what it had been before. This was brought
about
by operation of the following clause in the policy:
## ‘Reinstatement
of Benefit Amount
‘
Reinstatement
of Benefit Amount
## After
the 14 day survival period following a claim event, the Benefit
Amount for conditions that are totally unrelated, in the opinion
of
Hollard Life, to the condition or event for which the claim had been
paid will automatically reinstate to the Benefit Amount
immediately
prior to the claim payment.
After
the 14 day survival period following a claim event, the Benefit
Amount for conditions that are totally unrelated, in the opinion
of
Hollard Life, to the condition or event for which the claim had been
paid will automatically reinstate to the Benefit Amount
immediately
prior to the claim payment.
## After
100% of the Benefit Amount has been paid in respect of a condition or
event, the Benefit Amount for conditions that are related
to that
condition will automatically reinstate 90 days after the claimevent
on the following basis:…..
After
100% of the Benefit Amount has been paid in respect of a condition or
event, the Benefit Amount for conditions that are related
to that
condition will automatically reinstate 90 days after the claim
event
on the following basis:…..
Claims
prior to 75th
birthday 25% of the
original Benefit Amount plus any
benefit
increases’
[10]
This
then, according to Ms Gonnerman, explains why Mr Delpaul was paid 25%
of the Benefit amount because Event 3, the event we are
dealing with,
was a condition
related to
the
conditions (Events 1 and 2) that had led to the original Benefit
amount being completely drawn down. Thus 90 days thereafter
the
replenishment (reinstatement) of the Benefit amount had been limited
or capped at ‘
25% of the original
Benefit amount plus any benefit increases
’
and
why Mr Delpaul’s cover in terms of the Cardiovascular Benefit
Group was then completely exhausted and he was, once the
25% had been
paid to him, no longer ever entitled to any further pay-out under
this Benefit Group.
Mr
Delpaul
[11]
Mr
Delpaul testified that he understood the policy to pay out per
event
,
that he had not been paid out for the event described as
‘
Heart
Attack’
prior to this claim
as Events 1 and 2 related to other events under the Cardiovascular
Benefit Group. He contended that he was accordingly
entitled to
payment of the percentage shown for this event which is 100% of the
Benefit amount.
Analysis
[12]
I
am conscious of the dangers of referencing the witnesses’
understanding of the policy when interpreting an agreement. As
a
general rule, such evidence would be inadmissible as it is
irrelevant. It is for a court to interpret the agreement/policy, but
one may have regard to such evidence for, amongst other reasons,
context
[1]
.
[13]
Reading
the policy as a whole, it is clear that the percentages shown for
each event within a Benefit Group, is payable ‘per
cardiovascular event’. The ‘Reinstatement of Benefit
Amount’ provision, in my view, quoted herein before, supports
this construction. If, by way of example, 50% of the Benefit amount
for the event described as
‘
Heart
Transplant’
is paid, the
percentage paid is deducted from the 100% Benefit amount (R2,3
million) and what remains left for that event (being
R1,15 million),
can be claimed in the future. If that remaining 50% is also paid out,
the Benefit amount is reinstated after 90
days, but the subsequent
claim for the event of
‘
Heart
Transplant’
would be limited
to 25% for that event if the claim were made prior to the insured
reaching the age of 75.
[14]
The
‘Reinstatement of Benefit Amount’ clause places much
reliance on whether the claim was for a related or an
unrelated
condition.
If
there was a 100% of Benefit amount pay-out for a particular type
of
condition
and
then a subsequent claim was made for a
related
condition
then
90 days would have to have passed between the two related claims for
the Benefit amount to have been reinstated for the policy
to respond
to the second claim, and even then it would only respond to the
extent of 25% of the original Benefit amount provided
the insured was
under 75 years of age.
[15]
If,
however, the conditions of the two claims were
unrelated
then
a mere 14 days would have to have expired between the first and the
second claim and both could in that event be paid up to
100% each as
the Benefit amount automatically tops up for
unrelated
claims
after 14 days.
[16]
The
payment of the Benefit amount occurs pursuant to a claim for
an
event
as
opposed to a
Benefit Group
and
provides that the Benefit amount will automatically be reinstated for
conditions that are related to that event. On a proper
interpretation, this means that if Hollard paid 100% for a specific
cardiovascular event, such as the event ‘Heart Transplant’,
the Benefit amount would be reinstated for that event after 90 days
subject to a cap of 25% if Mr Delpaul were younger than 75
years of
age.
[17]
The
policy does not provide that once 100% of the Benefit amount in a
particular Group has been paid, no further payments will be
made for
such Group. The policy does however provide that ‘Only one
payment will be made per cardiovascular event.’
Thus, as there
are 12 events described under this Group, Mr Delpaul could claim for
each event once. He could in principle claim
for a different event
every 6 weeks. That is so because a single event is defined as all
cardiovascular procedures that occur within
a 30 day period (4 weeks)
and a claim will only be admitted after a 14 day (2 weeks) survival
period.
[18]
The
‘Reinstatement of Benefit Amount’ clause insofar as
‘related conditions’ are concerned, would only become
applicable where he were to claim for a second time for an event
under this Group and under such circumstances the Benefit amount
will
only be reinstated 90 days after the claim event and then the claim
will be capped to 25% of the Benefit amount (if the claim
were made
before the age of 75).
[19]
The
event ‘
Coronary Angioplasty/Stent
’
is defined to be a medical procedure used to open
narrowed blood vessels of the heart and devices known as ‘stents’
are used to help keep the arteries open. Crucially, it then provides:
‘This benefit covers an unlimited number of procedures.’
The policy provides that for each claim, for this event, 10% of the
Benefit amount is payable. For Hollard’s interpretation
of the
policy to be correct, this benefit ought to have been limited to 10
procedures because 10x10 = 100 and when that amount
is reached, the
Benefit amount would on Hollard’s interpretation be depleted.
Mrs Gonnerman, confronted with this dilemma,
testified that the
Benefit amount does not actually cover an unlimited number of
procedures as stated in the policy but only 10
procedures, at a
payment of 10% of the Benefit amount for each claim to a maximum of
100% of the Benefit amount.
[20]
This
answer contradicts the express wording of the policy. The sentence in
the policy can only be meaningful if one accepts that
the policy
responds
per event
and
the amount payable is a percentage of the Benefit amount. Under this
Group we know that only
one
payment
will be made
per event
however
the policy states that it will respond by paying out a benefit of 10%
of the Benefit amount for an ‘unlimited’
number of
procedures.
[21]
Mr
Mtukushe, representing Hollard, argued that the plaintiff’s
construction of the policy leads to an absurdity
[2]
and
that a contract should be interpreted to give it a
commercially
[3]
sensible
meaning. This is so because having regard to the amount of the
monthly premium, being R3 955.75, the parties could
not have intended
that Mr Delpaul would potentially be paid R2,3 million every 6 weeks.
[22]
No
evidence was presented as to Hollard’s risk assessment in
relation to these various Groups, what the probabilities are
of
suffering from conditions which would trigger payments and more
importantly surviving them to enable a pay-out. In my view this
argument has limited persuasive force in the context of this case and
on the evidence, or lack thereof, presented to assess this
‘absurdity’.
[23]
Mr
Mtukushe also drew attention to Mr Delpaul’s failure to have
objected to the manner in which Hollard had implemented the
policy
i.e. in accordance with its interpretation. Mr Delpaul was confronted
with this failure during cross-examination. He was
asked why, after
Event 2, he had not objected to the 90% pay-out when on his
construction of the policy he would have been entitled
to 100%. He
responded that
he did complain to his
broker, that he had changed brokers and that when he had instituted
action in this case, he had been told
that his claim in respect of
that 10% short payment, had prescribed.
[24]
He
was also criticised, during argument, for not having taken that
dispute to the Insurance Ombud in the same manner as he had done
with
the claim under Event 3. In my view, this criticism has limited value
as it was not traversed with Mr Delpaul during cross-examination.
He
was not afforded the opportunity to deal with this. I can think of a
number of explanations such as that the amount was relatively
small
(10%) and that he was recovering from surgery – the reward was
simply not worth the effort.
[25]
Finally,
Mr Mtukushe pointed out that Mr Delpaul was fully aware of Hollard’s
construction of the policy as it was endorsed
to that effect. After
the 100% ceiling had been reached, Hollard recorded under the heading
‘EXCLUSIONS AND ENDORSEMENTS’
on the covering page the
following ‘Payout under Cardiovascular Group – 100%’
and on the last page the following
‘It is hereby confirmed that
100% of the benefit amount has been paid out under the Cardiovascular
Benefit Group’.
[26]
Mr
Wannenburg, quite correctly in my view, pointed out that this
unilateral act by Hollard of recording that 100% of the Benefit
amount had been paid out is of no legal consequence on the case
pleaded before this court. The question is, how are the terms of
the
policy to be interpreted having regard to the admissible evidence.
[27]
The
object is to ascertain the intention of the parties
[4]
at
the time of the conclusion of the agreement and not how they endorsed
it along the way. I accept that it is permissible
to have regard to
the conduct of the parties in implementing an agreement in order to
answer this question but I have no evidence
before me as to when this
endorsement occurred and in any event, Events 1 and 2 happened so
shortly after one another that Mr Delpaul
might well have reasoned
that he was paid the full Benefit amount in a period of 3 months and
the 10% shortfall was not worth the
effort.
[28]
No
evidence was presented as to the related or unrelated nature of
Events 1, 2 and 3, nor of Hollard having formed any particular
view
(in a clinical, rather than a mere legal interpretive sense) as to
whether the conditions were related or not. That lacuna
leaves the
Court in the dark as to which of the scenarios contemplated in the
automatic reinstatement of the Benefit Amount clause
finds
application to Mr Delpaul’s case.
[29]
There
was a belated attempt during re-examination of Mrs Gonnerman to
suggest that Mr Delpaul’s underlying medical condition
is
atherosclerosis and Events 1, 2 and 3 were all related due to this
medical condition. No expert evidence was presented during
the trial
and the introduction of medical opinion evidence by an unqualified
person during re-examination, is inadmissible. But
perhaps more
problematic is that Hollard seems to have changed its reason for
repudiating the claim. Initially and in its letter
dated 4 September
2015 it relied on the following exclusion:
‘
No
claim will be paid under the reinstated cover where, in the opinion
of Hollard Life, the claim is a direct consequence of the
event for
which a 100% payment was made before reinstatement’.
[30]
Hollard
stated that:
‘
Unfortunately
the current claim cannot be considered under the re-instated cover as
the condition currently being claimed for is
directly related to the
ischaemic heart disease that resulted in the previous claim paid in
2012. We regret no further claim is
payable under the cardiovascular
benefit group.’
[31]
Yet,
Hollard paid 25%. If consistent, it ought to have paid nothing.
[32]
The
version sought to be advanced during re-examination was that all 3
Events were related. This is a causation issue which would
require
medical evidence which was not presented.
[33]
I
was referred to the contra proferentem rule and urged to resolve any
ambiguity against Hollard. I have no need to resort to this
rule to
construe the document against the author being Hollard. I am
persuaded by the wording of the policy discussed above and
the
evidence, or lack thereof, presented in the trial.
[34]
I
thus conclude that the amount payable for the heart attack suffered
by Mr Delpaul and claimed for on 15 August 2015 (Event 3),
entitles
him to payment of 100% of the Benefit amount as at that date being R
2 315 250 of which he has received 25% being R578
787.50. I intend
ordering Hollard to pay Mr Delpaul the balance.
Costs
[35]
In
respect of costs, it should follow the result except for one feature:
The trial commenced on a Monday (23 January 2023) and on
the Friday
preceding this (20 January 2023), Hollard uploaded 957 pages onto
Caselines. Perturbed by this, Mr Delpaul’s attorneys
of record
immediately sent a mail objecting to the late uploading of the
voluminous trial bundle and recorded their prejudice in
preparing
properly for the trial. In response, Hollard’s attorneys
pointed out that Hollard’s discovery affidavit,
containing all
the documents which were uploaded, was served more than 3 years
prior, that most of the documents were already in
their possession
and that Mr Delpaul’s bundle was only uploaded on the Wednesday
(18 January 2023).
[36]
During
a pre-trail held on 19 May 2022 the parties had agreed that the
plaintiff would prepare the trial bundles and provide them
to the
defendant 4 weeks before trial. The defendant would supplement the
bundles if necessary, within a week from receipt of the
bundles. It
is unclear when the trial bundles were made available, but it would
appear from the Caselines bundle that it was about
18 January 2023.
Both parties therefore did not comply with the timeline agreed to at
the pre-trial.
[37]
Mr
Wannenburg stressed that not a single document of the 957 documents
uploaded was used. He argued that they were not only irrelevant
but
also of a highly confidential nature consisting of amongst other
documents, medical reports, pathology reports, laboratory
results and
the like, all of which were now part of a public record. He argued
that this constituted an abuse of the process and
that it should
attract a punitive costs order.
[38]
The
awarding of costs is a matter of judicial discretion to be exercised
having regard to all the facts of the case. I do not consider
that
the uploading of the vast amount of documents at the eleventh hour is
deserving of a punitive costs order in the circumstances
of this
case. It seems that both parties were late with their trial
preparation. Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant complied
with
the agreement reached at the pre-trial. Also, there was no request
after the uploading of the documents to remove same on
the basis of
confidentiality. The objection related to the timing thereof not to
the content of that which was uploaded. As it
turns out the documents
were not used and as they are confidential they should be removed
from the Caselines file within 24 hours
of this judgment being handed
down, failing which the matter may be enrolled before me for this
costs order to be revisited.
Order
[39]
I
accordingly grant the following order:
Judgment
is granted against the Defendant for:
39.1. Payment
in the amount of R1 736 437.50 together with interest
thereon at the rate of 10.25%
per annum from 23 May 2018 to date of
final payment.
39.2. Costs
of suit.
39.3. The
documents at Caselines 0017-1 to 0017-957 are to be removed within 24
hours of this order being
mailed to the Defendant’s attorneys
of record failing which the Plaintiff may set this matter down before
Opperman J for
the scale of the costs order to be revisited.
I
OPPERMAN
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Counsel
for the plaintiff: Mr
WF Wannenburg
Instructed
by: Esthe
Muller Inc
Counsel
for the defendant: Mr L Mtukushe
Instructed
by: Rupert
Candy Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 23
January 2023 and 13 June 2023
Date
of Judgment: 30
June
2023
## [1]KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another(644/07)
[2009] ZASCA 7; 2009 (4) SA 399 (SCA) ; [2009] 2 All SA 523 (SCA)
(13 March 2009) at par [39] where Harms JA said: ‘…Fourth,
to the extent that evidence may be admissible to contextualise the
document (since “context is everything”
to establish its
factual matrix or purpose or for purposes of identification, “one
must use it as conservatively as possible”
[1]
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another
(644/07)
[2009] ZASCA 7; 2009 (4) SA 399 (SCA) ; [2009] 2 All SA 523 (SCA)
(13 March 2009) at par [39] where Harms JA said: ‘…
Fourth,
to the extent that evidence may be admissible to contextualise the
document (since “context is everything”
to establish its
factual matrix or purpose or for purposes of identification, “one
must use it as conservatively as possible”
[2]
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Botha & Seuns Transport (Edms)
Bpk
,
2014
(2) SA 494
(SCA)
at para [12]
[3]
North
East Finance (Pty) Ltd v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
,
2013
(5) SA 1
(SCA)
at para [24]
[4]
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
,
2016
(1) SA 518
(SCA)
at paras [27] – [35];
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99
(9
July 2021)
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