Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 332South Africa
Blackspear Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 332 (16 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 May 2022
Headnotes
Headnote
Judgment
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## Blackspear Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 332 (16 May 2022)
Blackspear Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 332 (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
26150/2020
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
16
May 2022
In
the matter between
: -
BLACKSPEAR
HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
And
BRYTE
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED FIRST
DEFENDANT
SASRIA
SOC LIMITED
SECOND DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
This
judgment has been handed down by being uploaded to Caselines on 16
May 2022 which date is the deemed date of delivery.
Headnote
Insurance
claim – the principal issue was the determination of the
factual and legal cause of mining equipment submerged and
destroyed
in a flooded mine - one of two insurers liable- either the primary
insurer in terms of all all risks policy or Sasria
if the losses were
caused by labour unrest – on the facts the cause of the losses
was established as the conduct of striking
workers who occupied the
shaft, inhibited anyone attending to the pumps to operate them and
cut the electrical cables linking a
generator on the surface required
to power the pumps.
Held:
Sasria was liable
Costs:
a costs order was made that Sasria pay the costs of both Blackspear
and Bryte as it was the unsuccessful defendant –
Rule 10(4) (b)
ii of the Uniform Rules of Court.
Other
factors taken into account included the failure of Sasria, who
conceded at the conclusion of the trial that its liability
was proven
on the facts, not to have done so before the trial of 4 days
commenced. The trial was conducted under the rules of the
Gauteng
Commercial Court which required every party, prior to the hearing, to
furnish full witness statements which stood as the
evidence in chief.
The body of evidence revealed there had n not been challenged.
Also,
Bryte had pleaded prescription of the claim. Because of the finding
on liability, that defence became superfluous. However,
the defence
was held to be good. Because that aspect of the case took up a
negligible portion of the hearing and it was impracticable
to sever
it from the other aspects of the case for the purpose of apportioning
costs, it was appropriate to ignore it in the costs
order.
Per
Sutherland DJP:
Introduction
[1]
This case is about an insurance claim. The Plaintiff, Blackspear, is
the
owner of earthmoving equipment used in underground mining. It
leased the equipment to a mining company, Thutsi Mining (Pty) Ltd.
Thutsi mined a colliery in which Blackspear’s equipment was
situated. The mine was flooded from an ingress of underground
water.
This rendered the equipment unsalvageable.
[2]
Blackspear claims that one or other of the defendants, Bryte or
Sasria,
both insurers, is liable to pay compensation for the loss of
the equipment. Bryte is the primary insurer with whom Blackspear had
a contract of insurance covering the equipment. Sasria is a public
state-owned insurer of special risks; in this case, in respect
of
losses sustained as a result of labour unrest. The Bryte policy
excludes the perils covered by Sasria and vice versa, an arrangement
articulated in the Bryte policy by an exception from the scope of its
cover of a labour unrest peril, and by the Sasria policy
or “coupon”,
covering such a peril, which coupon is supplementary to the policy
issued by Bryte to Blackspear.
[3]
The critical issue is whether Sasria is liable on the basis that the
loss
of the equipment was owing to labour unrest or Bryte is liable
on the basis that the loss of the equipment was not the result of
labour unrest, its policy being cover for all risks. A secondary
issue that is relevant only to a claim against Bryte is that were
Bryte to be held liable on its policy for the loss, whether or not
Blackspear’s claim has prescribed.
[4]
The parties agreed to a separation of the issues. These proceedings
address
only the issues so defined. The minute of the agreement reads
thus:
“
Special
plea of prescription:
2.1. The first
defendant’s special plea of prescription enunciated at
paragraphs 1 to 15 of its special plea, read together
with paragraphs
1 to 4 of the plaintiff’s amended replication.
Separation of the
remaining merits:
2.2. The separated issue
is that of causation.
2.3. The central issue is
the determination of the proximate cause of the damage or loss
suffered by the plaintiff.
2.4. The issue of
causation requires a determination of whether the proximate cause of
the loss or damages suffered by the plaintiff
was either civil
commotion, labour disturbances, riot, strikes, lockout or public
disorder or any act or activity which is calculated
or directed to
bring about any of the aforementioned.
2.5. If the proximate
cause of the damage or loss suffered by the plaintiff was related to
or caused by any of the events or activities
referred to in paragraph
2.4 above, then the second defendant is liable to indemnify the
plaintiff for its proven damages or loss,
except where it is found
that the plaintiff had omitted to take reasonable steps that would
have prevented and/or restricted any
damage to the mine and/or mining
equipment.
2.6. If the proximate
cause of the loss suffered by the plaintiff were activities or events
not related to any conduct referred
to in paragraph 2.4 above, and
the loss was not caused by the removal of the main generator by the
plaintiff, then the first defendant
is liable to indemnify the
plaintiff for its damages or loss.”
A
narrative of relevant events
[5]
It is common cause that the assets of Blackspear were lost because
they
were drowned in the mine.
[6]
Several years ago, the colliery began its life as an open cast pit.
In
its second phase, a horizontal shaft was excavated into the wall
of the pit to continue the operation as an underground operation.
The
tunnels extend to well in excess of a kilometre. The inner terrain is
roughly undulating but does vary slightly up or down,
presumably, as
it tracks the coal seam and encounters various rock formations.
[7]
The mine experiences ingress of water from the surrounding landmass,
a
commonplace phenomenon in mining underground. It is essential that
the water that seeps into the shaft be extracted. This is achieved
by
pumps which are supposed to be in operation 24 hours a day every day.
A similar requirement for safe mining in a colliery is
the
appropriate ventilation of the shaft. A colliery is susceptible to a
build-up of methane gasses which presents a danger of
spontaneous
ignition with deadly consequences. Thus, continuous ventilation by
means of fans and other measures is supposed to
be in place at all
times.
[8]
The mine operated on a 5-day week three-shift basis with two
production
shifts of 10 hours each and one maintenance shift of 4
hours. On Saturdays there was one production shift. On Sundays there
was
one maintenance shift.
[9]
The pumps were operated by a designated attendant on each production
shift.
These attendants were skilled in the relevant know- how to
maintain the pumps whilst in use. The pumps did not operate in the
absence
of an attendant. The pumps were powered by electricity. The
electricity was supplied by a diesel generator situated on the
surface
near the shaft entrance. The generator was axiomatically
situated at a great distance from the pumps. The generator and the
pumps
were connected by cables laid out through the shafts. The point
of significance is that the requirement to keep the water ingress
under control, a
sine qua non
for the mining activities to be
undertaken, in turn, required skilled personnel to man the pumps and
the pumps to be supplied with
electrical power. The system could only
work if both power and personnel were operational.
[10]
The flooding of the mine shafts and the opencast pit is common cause,
as it the loss of
the assets as a result of that flooding. The key
factual question is to assign legal responsibility for the failure to
sustain
the pumping out of the water.
[11]
The mine
was fully operational until 25 June 2016. The significance of that
date is that the workforce who were due their wages
on 25 June were
not paid because the mine had no funds to do so. The workers refused
to continue to work. On 30 June the management
switched off the
generator. It is said that operations ceased on that day, although no
formal communication of the cessation of
operations was made to the
Department of Minerals and Energy, as required by law. The evidence
is that the management contemplated
that the cessation would be
temporary and of short duration. The most probable reason to swich
off the generator is that there
was no point in burning fuel to
generate electricity if no attendant was at the site of the pumps to
operate them. Unfortunately,
the mine manager Piet Botha and his
superior, the general manager of Thutsi, Malcolm Ford, did not
testify. Botha had died.
[1]
Ford was listed to testify but was not called after all. Therefore,
useful detail has been denied to the enquiry,
[12]
On 15 July, the generator was removed from the site by its owner who
had leased it to the
mine and had not been paid. The mine had another
back-up generator, the property of Blackspear, which could have been
used. It
was not put into operation, presumably for the same reasons
that the principal generator had been switched off.
[13]
The work stoppage continued for a considerable time. The management
were, during this period,
scrambling to secure funding to meet the
workers’ wages and pay other creditors. By 30 July 2016, no
wages had yet been paid.
It must be inferred that this incensed the
workers. Members of the union, AMCU, which represented some, but not
all of the workers,
on that day, entered the mine shaft and commenced
a sit-in. Management was denied access to the underground areas.
There are no
witnesses to testify exactly what the workers did whilst
there. What took place, whilst they were in occupation, was later
revealed.
[14]
The behaviour of the workers was violent. All administrative staff
were warned off and
remained away from the mine throughput this
period. Annemarie Weir, the financial manager and her assistant, on
25 August 2016,
made an exceptional trip to their office to retrieve
UIF documentation to enable a payment to be made to the workers. They
were
besieged in their office and assaulted. The Police were summoned
to rescue them. They were extracted and taken away to safety under
escort. An interdict was granted by the Labour Court on 31 August
which addressed the objective of getting the workers out of the
mine,
inter alia
for their own safety and to try to secure the
assets underground from harm.
[15]
The sit-in endured until 20 September 2016 with a short interruption
in early August when
a payment to the workers was made on 2 August.
Julien Cassinga, the mine geologist and site manager, and Botha,
seized the opportunity
during what Cassinga described as a “quiet
moment” to enter the mine to inspect conditions What they
observed was widespread
vandalization of various pieces of equipment
and, most importantly, of electrical cabling. The destruction of the
electrical reticulation
infrastructure meant that it was impossible
to supply power to the pumps. Photos of the wanton destruction were
exhibited to the
court. They showed the cut cables and the stripping
of copper wiring from transformers and battery chargers and the like.
The only
reasonable inference to draw is that the workers perpetrated
these acts of vandalism and theft.
[16]
At that time, the pumps had been inoperative for approximately six
weeks. During this inspection,
the ingress of water was noted by
Cassinga. The working face was inaccessible. Razor wire was
thereafter fitted to the shaft entrance
to try to secure the area,
but the workers returned to resume their sit-in and broke through the
barrier to gain access. By the
time a deal was eventually reached
with the workers on 20 September 2016, to pay their wages in
instalments, the mine had been
lost to flooding and was not capable
of economic rehabilitation. With the loss of the mine, axiomatically
went the loss of the
insured equipment.
[17]
The expert evidence of Gerard Scherman, a consulting mining engineer,
was presented. He
addressed the prospects of re-opening the mine for
production and traversed the practical and bureaucratic requirements.
The rehabilitation
would probably cost about R22,084,820 plus VAT and
such a project would take about six months to complete. This is
expenditure
which would produce no revenue; it would simply open the
prospects of fresh operations requiring yet further capital.
[18]
The management of the mine and that of Blackspear were plainly
powerless to resist the
force exerted by the workers. In this regard
the evidence is that the police were loath to engage the workers
physically. No criticism
can be advanced that there were reasonable
steps by Blackspear that could have been taken and which were
neglected.
What
is the legal cause of the damages suffered by Blackspear?
[19]
The test to be applied is that set forth in
Guardrisk Insurance Co
Ltd v Café Cameleon Cc
2021 (2) SA 323
(SCA) at paras 37 -41:
“
[37] The general
approach to causation also applies to insurance law. Factual
causation is the first enquiry. The diagnostic
tool is the 'but for'
test, which involves a 'hypothetical enquiry as to what probably
would have happened but for the wrongful
conduct of the defendant'.
The test is usually applied in the law of delict. In the insurance
context, the analysis is aimed at
establishing what would have
happened, but for the insured peril.
[38] The courts have
recognised that a rigid application of the test may sometimes yield
unpalatable and unfair results, and have
thus cautioned against
applying 'rigid deductive logic'. In what is now an oft-quoted
passage from this court, in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden
17
Nugent JA said:
'A plaintiff is not
required to establish the causal link with certainty, but only to
establish that the wrongful conduct was a
probable cause of the loss,
which calls for a sensible retrospective analysis of what would
probably have occurred, based upon
the evidence and what can be
expected to occur in the course of ordinary human affairs rather than
an exercise in metaphysics.'
[39] The common-law 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'. For insurance contracts the question always is, 'Has the
event, on which I
put my premium, actually occurred?'
[40] Of relevance in the
instant case is that there may be more than one cause or multiple
causes giving rise to a claim. In that
case 'the proximate or actual
or effective cause (it matters not what term is used) must be
ascertained . . .'. 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'. 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.
[41] The enquiry into
legal causation usually follows factual causation. It asks whether
there is a sufficiently close relationship
between the factual cause
and the consequent loss to give rise to legal liability. Put
differently, the question is whether the
loss is too remote for the
factual cause to also be the legal cause. If not, no legal liability
may arise.”
[20]
Both Blackspear and Bryte allege the cause of the loss suffered was
the workers conduct
which was a peril covered by Sasria. Sasria’s
case is that the cause of the losses is the removal of the main
generator.
[21]
On the facts described, it is plain that the idea of the removal of
the generator as a
cause of the loss is unsustainable. Indeed, as is
amply demonstrated the presence or absence of the generator is
irrelevant. The
key to the controversy is to ask who is responsible
for the failure to maintain the pumps in operation. The answer is
plain:
21.1.
the withdrawal of labour, including the labour of the pump
attendants,
21.2.
and the prevention of anyone else manning the pumps by denying
access,
21.3.
and moreover, the cutting of the cables,
21.4.
all with the clear intention of hurting the mining operation.
[22]
Some evidence was adduced from the claims-handlers of both insurers.
None of it was useful
for the purpose of determining liability. Bryte
had commissioned an assessor to advise it and furnished a report
which alleged
the labour action was the cause. This was the basis for
Bryte answering the claim by denying there weas cover for the peril
in
question. Sasria commissioned an assessor to give it a report.
That assessor did not testify. Sasria’s case as pleaded was
that the removal of the generator was the cause of the losses. This
has been proven to be incorrect. In short, the vandalism of
the
workers rendered the pumping operations impossible which in the chain
of causation resulted in the mine being lost to flooding.
[23]
This case
is not one where there can be argued that, plausibly, there was more
than one cause. The chain of events are unequivocally
linked between
the worker seizure of the shaft, their vandalism and violence, and
the subsequent flooding.
[2]
[24]
During argument, Counsel for Sasria, quite properly conceded
that the body of evidence
adduced proved that the cause of the losses
suffered by Blackspear was the labour unrest which was a peril for
which Sasria was
liable to Blackspear.
The
Prescription issue
[25]
As a result of the finding made on causation it follows that Bryte is
not liable. The consequence
is that the prescription defence has
turned out to be superfluous. It is potentially relevant only to
costs.
[26]
The case pleaded by Bryte alleges that action was instituted
after three years had
elapsed from the date of the loss having been
sustained. The date relied upon is 20 September 2016 when the
management had unfettered
access to the mine to assess the ultimate
scale of the disaster, o,r at very latest, November 2016 when a claim
was lodged. The
action was indeed commenced more than three years
later than these dates.
[27]
Blackspear replicated that the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
did not
apply because Bryte was confined to clause 8(b) of its policy which
provided for a period of prescription from the date
of a rejection of
the claim and, as no rejection was ever issued, the clause could not
be invoked. This proposition is unsound
in law. It is contradicted by
the decision in
Muller v Sanlam Life Assurance Ltd 2016 JDR
1813(SCA)
at paras 17-19.
“
[14] There are
several strings to Muller's bow on prescription. First, he contends
that until a claim has been repudiated by an
insurer, the debt does
not become due. But there is no authority for that proposition.
Section 12(1)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
provides that
'prescription shall commence to run as soon as the debt is due;
s
12(3)
states that a 'debt shall not be deemed to be due until the
creditor has knowledge of the identity of the debtor and the facts
from which the debt arises: provided that a creditor shall be deemed
to have such knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising
reasonable care'.
[15] In
Danielz
NO v De Wet & another
2009 (6) SA 42
(C) (paras 48, and 50 to
54) the court stated that the Act applies to insurance contracts as
to all other contracts. Traverso DJP
stated that in terms of the
insurance contract in issue, the debt became due when the insured
died. That was the date on which
prescription commenced to run.
[16] Muller knew of
the death of his former wife and the existence of the policies on
that date – 13 September 2006.
Thus, the debt would have
prescribed on 12 September 2009, three years later. That Muller was
aware of the debt immediately is
confirmed by the fact that he
consulted his broker, G Botha, very soon after the death and claims
were lodged on his behalf. And
he had taken out the policies not long
before his former wife's death so he was fully aware of their
existence and their terms.
Yet no proceedings were instituted until
10 May 2011, more than four years after the debt became due.
[17] Sanlam
accepted that it bore the onus of proving that the debt had
prescribed. It argued that the contention of Muller
that prescription
would only begin to run on the date when it rejected his claim was
unsustainable. As Nugent JA said in
Duet & Magnum Financial
Services CC v Koster
[2010] ZASCA 34
;
[2010] 4 All SA 154
(SCA)
para 24: 'At times the exercise of a right calls for no action on the
part of the "debtor", but only for the "debtor"
to submit himself or herself to the exercise of the right.'
[18] It was thus
not incumbent on Sanlam to accept or reject Muller's claims on the
policies. Only when process was served
on it in terms of the Act
would it be obliged to defend the claim. Thus the numerous queries
directed by the broker, G Botha, who
represented Muller in dealing
with Sanlam, did not require an answer from it, whether accepting the
claim or rejecting it.
[19] Although the
court considered cases that have dealt with the time at which a debt
becomes due, I do not think it is necessary
to repeat the established
principles again. Muller had all the knowledge of the facts
underlying his cause of action on the date
of his former wife's
death. In
Minister of Finance & others v Gore NO
[2006]
ZASCA 98
;
2007 (1) SA 111
(SCA) this court said (para 17) that 'time
begins to run against the creditor when it has the minimum facts that
are necessary
to institute action. The running of prescription is not
postponed until a creditor becomes aware of the full extent of its
legal
rights, nor until the creditor has evidence that would enable
it to prove a case "comfortably"' (footnotes omitted).”
[28]
There was no doubt about the identity of the insurer to whom a claim
could be made nor
any uncertainty about the relevant necessary facts
of which knowledge was a precondition to articulating a claim.
Indeed, Blackspear
demonstrated exactly that in its claim.
[29]
Accordingly, the prescription plea is good.
The
Costs of suit
[30]
The strategic decision by Blackspear to sue both insurers cannot be
criticised on any forensic
grounds. Although it has succeeded in
obtaining an order declaring Sasria liable, the action
ex
abundante cautela
against Bryte ensured that were it to have
failed in such a case against Sasria, the axiomatic result would have
been to establish
liability of Bryte. It might even be thought that
Bryte had a material interest in the
lis
between Blackspear
and Sasria; indeed, in the hearing Bryte and Blackspear were
de
facto
on the same side.
[31]
It was
argued that an onus rested on Bryte to prove its exception as regards
cover for labour unrest applied in this case. This
is correct.
[3]
Although the exception in the Bryte policy is not articulated in the
identical terms in the Sasria coupon, for all practical purposes,
proof of a “Sasria peril” on Sasria’s terms would
be clear proof of the applicability of the exception. Bryte,
too, has
been prudent by not putting up a single defence, and to cater for the
risk of a court finding Sasria is not liable, added
the prescription
defence.
[32]
The question thus arises, in this context, as to who should bear the
costs. Blackspear’s
argument is that Sasria should pay the
costs of both other parties. This was premised on the notion that
there is a
lis
between the two defendants. Strictly speaking
that is not correct. But that nicety is unimportant to this analysis.
A practical
evaluation of this case is that it has been
de facto
a contest between the two defendants to show the other is liable
rather than itself. Both Blackspear and Bryte have succeeded in
the
face of resistance from Sasria.
[33]
Blackspear contends that there is a further reason why Sasria should
bear the costs of
both other parties. Sasria conceded liability, at
argument stage, but it much earlier, had available to it, through the
medium
of the witness statements, all the evidence, none of which was
uncontested by Sasria in the four-day hearing. This is a valid point.
[34]
This case
has been prepared and conducted in accordance with the rules of the
Gauteng Division Commercial Court.
[4]
This involved a judge case-managing the matter from early on, and of
particular significance, the provision, prior to the hearing,
of
witness statements to stand as evidence in the trial during which
cross examination alone took place. It is contended that Sasria
was
fully acquainted with the evidence to establish its liability and
could have capitulated before the costs of the hearing were
incurred.
In my view, among the several advantages of the commercial court
model is precisely that opportunity to take a rational
decision about
the likely outcome of the case at an earlier time, and potentially
save costs. A failure to do so ought to attract
accountability.
[35]
Lastly, it was contended that this failure by Sasria was egregious
and should attract a
punitive costs order. In answer it was argued
whatever the evidence in the witness statements might reveal it was
not improper
to see what came out in the trial before reassessing
one’s case. That argument would have enjoyed some force if any
part
of the body of evidence had at least been challenged, even if
not rebutted. In this case, the evidence as laid out in the witness
statements was barely amplified in cross examination. Nothing novel
was extracted because nothing novel was asked of the witnesses.
It is
thus fair to contend that a four-trial could have been avoided.
[36]
Does it however warrant a punitive costs order? In my view it does
not. A punitive costs
order is appropriate where mala fide practises
are evident. These circumstances do not reflect that to be so and to
rebuke Sasria
or its legal representatives on these facts would be
inappropriate. Nonetheless, in my view, the appropriate costs order
is that
Sasria bear the costs of both Blackspear and of Bryte on the
party and party scale.
[37]
What then of the segment of the case concerned with Prescription? It
consumed a negligible
portion of the time taken up in the hearing.
Were it practical to sever it from the whole, I would do so, but it
seems to me to
be an exercise that would constitute a
disproportionate effort to achieve such end.
[38]
Accordingly, having regard to the scope of the discretion provided in
Rule 10 (4)(b)ii
of the Uniform Rules of Court, in my view it is
appropriate that Sasria shall bear the costs of Blackspear and of
Bryte, Sasria
being the unsuccessful defendant.
[39]
On behalf of Blackspear, the costs of two counsel were sought. It was
contended on behalf
of Saria that this was not appropriate. I
disagree. This matter is of enormous importance to Blackspear and its
shareholders. The
loss of the mining equipment is, in effect, the
loss of the substratum of the business of Blackspear. The quantum
sought is supposedly
R18.629m, and although that has yet to be
proven, it cannot be said that a litigant is being extravagant in
briefing two counsel
to present its case.
The
Order
(1)
It is declared that the second defendant is liable to the
plaintiff
in the sum of its proven damages.
(2)
The second defendant shall bear the costs of the plaintiff and of the
first defendant, including the costs of two counsel where so
employed.
ROLAND
SUTHERLAND DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
9 -12 May 2022
Judgment:
16 May 2022
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv
R Shepstone,
Adv
K Pule
Instructed
by A Nondwana of Fairbridges Wertheim Becker.
For
the First Defendant:
Adv
L Choate
Instructed
by C Theodosiou of Webber Wentzel.
For
the Second Defendant:
Adv
P J Coetsee
instructed
by J Smith of Stegmanns.
[1]
An
application to admit hearsay evidence emanating from Botha was
unopposed and granted. Nevertheless, such material evidence
from
this source was in any event corroborated by Julien Cassinga.
[2]
See;
Incorporated General Insurance Ltd v Shooter 1987(1) SA 842 (A) at
862C
.
[3]
See:
Griesel v SA Myn & Algemene Assuransie (Edms) Bpk , supra, at
477
.
[4]
These
Rules are accessible in Erasmus et al,
Superior
Court Practice, 2
nd
Ed (Juta), vol 3
,
in section H.
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