Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 879South Africa
Transnet SOC Ltd v Santam Ltd (30445/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 879 (7 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Transnet SOC Ltd v Santam Ltd (30445/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 879 (7 August 2023)
Transnet SOC Ltd v Santam Ltd (30445/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 879 (7 August 2023)
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sino date 7 August 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTEMG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 30445/2014
NOT REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
TRANSNET
SOC LTD
Applicant
and
SANTAM
LTD
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties and/or
parties’ representatives by email. The date
and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 07 August 2023 at 10:00.
JUDGMENT ON LEAVE TO
APPEAL
MASHILE J:
[1] On 9 November
2022, this Court dismissed an insurance claim brought by the
Applicant (“Transnet”) against
the Respondent (“Santam”)
with costs. Dissatisfied with the judgment and order, Transnet
launched an application for
leave to appeal wherein it outlines
several grounds on which it asserts the Court has erred. As such,
Transnet argues that there
exist reasonable prospects that another
Court would find differently from the decision reached by this Court.
Arguing to the contrary,
Santam opposes the application.
[2] Transnet
challenges the judgment and order on the following basis:
2.1 The Court erred in
dismissing the Plaintiff’s claims on the basis that the
liability for which the Plaintiff
sued was a statutory
liability in respect of which there was no third-party
claimant to compensate;
2.2
The Court erred by holding that pollution damage was only indemnified
by the Defendant
i
f
it arose out of a sudden unintended and unexpected happening
during the period of the insurance and that the seepage in
this
instance had happened over a long period of time/ and
2.3 The Court also erred
in finding that it was necessary to call a witness to say what the
State would have done if the Plaintiff
had not performed its
statutory obligation to clean up and pay for the cost of clean-up of
the pollution.
[3] The application
is brought in terms of Section 17(1) of the Superior Court Act 10 of
2013, which in relevant part stipulates
that:
“
Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges are of the
opinion that –
(i)
the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard, including conflicting
judgements on the matter under
consideration; ….
”
[4]
If leave is granted against an order of a single Judge in terms of
the provisions of Subsection 2(a) or (b), the Judge
granting leave
must direct that the appeal be heard by the full Court of that
division unless:
“
(i)
the decision to be appealed involves a question of law of
importance…;
(iii)
that
the administration of justice requires consideration by the Supreme
Court of Appeal.
”
[5]
The test which was applied previously in applications of this nature
was whether there were reasonable prospects that
another Court may
come to a different conclusion. What emerges from section 17(1) is
that the threshold to grant a party leave
to appeal has been raised.
It is now only granted in the circumstances set out and is deduced
from the words like, “would”
and “only” used
in the Section.
[6]
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[1]
the Court observed that:
“
I
am mindful of the decisions at high court level debating whether the
use of the word ‘would’ as opposed to
‘could’
possibly means that the threshold for granting the appeal has
been raised. If a reasonable prospect
of success is established,
leave to appeal should be granted. Similarly, if there are some
other compelling reasons why the appeal
should be heard, leave to
appeal should be granted. The test of reasonable prospects of
success postulates a dispassionate decision
based on the facts and
the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court.
In other words, the
appellants in this matter need to convince this Court on proper
grounds that they have prospects of success
on appeal. Those
prospects of success must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable chance of succeeding. A sound rational
basis for the
conclusion that there are prospects of success must be shown to
exist.”
[7] To turn then to
the first ground - the Court erred in dismissing the Plaintiff’s
claims on the basis that the liability
for which the Plaintiff sued
was a statutory liability in respect of which there was no
third-party claimant to compensate. This
ultimately turns on
interpretation of the language used in the contract of insurance.
Transnet submitted that the Court assigned
the plain meaning of the
word, ‘compensation’, without having regard to context,
purpose or background.
[8]
Contrary to what Transnet believes, the court was, in addition to the
plain language used, mindful of the context and
purpose of the
contract. The point is that the wording of the relevant clause in the
contract in the
Verulam
Fuel Distributors CC v Truck & General Insurance Company Ltd &
Another
[2]
case
was
different from the current. The Court was at pains to explain itself
why it felt that it could not attach a similar meaning
in
circumstances where the two clauses conspicuously and deliberately
deliver two distinct messages. Transnet readily conceded
that it
relies on the case mindful that the wording of the indemnity clause
in the case is different from the current.
[9] At paragraph 47
of the judgment, I explained that the difference is to be found in
the indemnity being against all sums
of money paid in undertaking the
clean-up operations in the case of Verulam Fuel Distributers CC
supra
whereas
in casu
the relevant clause provides that the insurers
will indemnify the insured against their liability to pay
compensation (including
claimants’ costs, fees and expenses) …
[10] In all the cases
that I have cited in the judgment including Verulam, the Courts
accentuate the significance of the manner
in which the indemnity
clause is formulated. Depending on how it has been couched, it would
either exclude or include liability.
The court is aware that Transnet
attaches no value to the wording of the clauses and is persistent
that the Court should not have
dismissed the claim.
[11] I am awake to the
fact that unless foreign case authority is infused or incorporated
into our law, its importance will be no
more than persuasive and may
only followed where there is no guideline in our own legal system. My
reference to the Australian
case of
Hamcor
(Pty) Limited and Another v Marsh (Pty) Limited and Another
[3]
Should
have been understood against that backdrop and not that it was relied
upon as binding authority on this Court
.
I
disagree and do not believe that another Court would reach a
different conclusion on this issue. However, since the wording of
these clauses are likely to continue to bedevil High Courts, it
constitutes a compelling reason to grant leave to the Supreme Court
of Appeal to settle this question once and for all.
[12] Transnet also
contended that the Court erred by holding that pollution damage was
only indemnified by Santam
i
f it arose out of a sudden
unintended and unexpected happening during the period of the
insurance and that the seepage in this instance
had happened over an
extended period. Transnet asserted the converse in this regard - the
pollution damage arose out of a sudden
unintended and unexpected
happening during the period of the insurance and that it was of no
moment that the seepage occurred over
a long time.
[13] Again, the issue
here is one of interpretation. Transnet reads the sudden, unintended
and unexpected from its own perspective
whereas Santam looked at it
from the angle of natural catastrophes where no human agents play
part. In other words, where a person
deliberately causes damage
liability to compensate Transnet will not arise. The exclusion of
liability in instances where the damage
was deliberately caused makes
business sense.
[14] Perhaps it is worth
pointing out that there is a connection between the exclusion
mentioned in Clause 1 of Part 2 of the contract
and the other
exclusions contained in the other clauses under Part 2. The only
difference is that Clause 1 of Part 2 envisages
exclusion of
liability where Transnet’s own personnel deliberately and
intentionally fail to take reasonable steps to avert
damage whereas
the others refer to a happening that is sudden, unintended and
unexpected but without the intervention of human
agents.
[15] I reiterate that I
found the authority of
African Products (Pty) Ltd v AIG South
Africa Ltd
at paragraph 20 instructive on this point. In fact,
the analogy is striking. I need to emphasise that in all the cases
that I have
referred to in the judgment, all of them underscore the
significance of the wording in the contract. Depending on the
wording,
the insurer will or will not be liable to compensate. As in
the case of the first ground, I do not believe that another Court
would
reach a different conclusion on this point but I regard the
difference in the interpretation of the meaning of ‘sudden,
unintended
and unexpected’ as sufficiently compelling to
warrant the attention of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[16] In the
circumstances, leave to appeal succeeds and I make the following
order:
- Leave to appeal is
granted to the Supreme Court of Appeal; and
Leave to appeal is
granted to the Supreme Court of Appeal; and
- Costs
will be those in the appeal.
Costs
will be those in the appeal.
B A MASHILE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTEMG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv
G
D Harpur SC
Instructed by:
Mkhabela Huntley
Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the Defendant:
Adv B
Berridge SC
Instructed by:
Clyde & Co
Date
of Judgment: 07 August 2023
[1]
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021)
[2]
[2004]
JOL 13042 (W)
[3]
[2013]
QCA 262
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