Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 525South Africa
Chartis South Africa Limited v Super Group Trading (PTY) Ltd (2010/36709) [2022] ZAGPJHC 525 (12 July 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Chartis South Africa Limited v Super Group Trading (PTY) Ltd (2010/36709) [2022] ZAGPJHC 525 (12 July 2022)
Chartis South Africa Limited v Super Group Trading (PTY) Ltd (2010/36709) [2022] ZAGPJHC 525 (12 July 2022)
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sino date 12 July 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2010/36709
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
12/7/2022
In
the matter between:
CHARTIS
SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
APPLICANT/DEFENDANT
And
SUPER
GROUP TRADING PTY LTD
RESPONDENT/PLAINTIFF
JUDGMENT
WINDELL,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application by the defendant (“Chartis”) in
terms of Rule 33(4) for the separation of issues in the action
instituted by the plaintiff (“Super Group”).
[2]
The action was instituted in September 2010. The protracted history
of the litigation proceedings is set out in the affidavits
and the
heads of argument. Despite being
dominus litis
, Super Group
has failed to progress the matter to trial.
CAUSE
OF ACTION
[3]
Super Group claims an indemnity in an amount of R31,000,000.00 from
Chartis under the Corporate Armour Crime Policy ("the
policy")
in respect of financial loss it is alleged to have suffered. The
policy and its terms are common cause between the
parties.
[4]
Super Group avers that:
“
10. During the
period from at least March 2006 until the end of May 2008 the
plaintiff sustained financial loss as a result of the
theft from the
plaintiff's possessions of the fast-moving consumer goods of the
plaintiff's clients.
11. The said financial
loss was occasioned by reason of and directly caused by
a
series of dishonest and fraudulent acts of a multiplicity of
employees of the plaintiff, acting in collusion.”
Emphasis added.
[5]
The particulars of claim do not indicate how many occurrences of
thefts there were, when such thefts occurred, which employees
were
responsible for the theft, how many employees were involved or what
loss was suffered by the plaintiff on each occasion of
theft.
[6]
The relevant operative insuring clause of the policy provides that:
"………,
cover is provided in respect of Insuring clauses A and B for
financial loss sustained by the Insured,
or a third party to whom the
insured may become legally liable, on or subsequent to the
retroactive date and prior to termination
of the Policy and
discovered by the Insured during the period of the Policy, or within
12 months of termination of the Policy.
INSURING CLAUSES.
A.
Employee Dishonesty
By reason of and
directly caused by one or more dishonest or fraudulent acts of any of
the Employees of the Insured, wherever committed
and whether
committed alone or in collusion with others, including loss of
property through any such acts of any such Employees."
[7]
Insuring clause A is qualified by proviso 2 (at page 6 of 17 of the
policy) in the following terms:
"provided that…….
All acts committed by any one person or in which such person is
involved or implicated will
be considered one occurrence."
("proviso 2")
[8]
Super Group's reliance upon,
inter alia,
insuring clause A
read with proviso 2, appears from what has been pleaded in paragraphs
7.2 and 7.3 of the particulars of claim:
"7.2 The
financial loss, in respect of which cover was provided by the
defendant to the plaintiff was loss by reason of, and
directly caused
by, one or more dishonest or fraudulent acts of any of the employees
of the plaintiff wherever committed and whether
committed alone or in
collusion with others, including loss of property through any such
acts of any such employees.
7.3 All acts committed
by any one person or in which any such person was involved or
implicated was to be considered one occurrence."
[9]
Super Group claims that it suffered a financial loss of
R38,741,104.28 as a result of "the theftuous activities of the
employees acting in collusion". The limit of indemnity in
respect of insuring clause A is R30 000 000,00 for each and every
occurrence and in the annual aggregate. The policy also provides for
a self-insured deductible of R750 000,00 in respect of each
and every
occurrence. Chartis' plea was delivered on 21 October 2010. The
application of the deductible clause was pertinently
pleaded in
paragraph 12 of the plea.
[10]
By virtue of the application of the deductible of R750 000,00
Chartis' obligation to indemnify Super Group under the policy
only
arises in respect of any particular occurrence of theft causing
financial loss once Super Group can demonstrate that it has,
in
respect of such occurrence, suffered a loss exceeding R750 000,00.
Hence, the crux of the dispute between the parties is whether
the
thefts from Super Group's warehouse — alleged to have occurred
over the period March 2006 until the end of May 2008 —constitute
numerous individual thefts, each subject to its own deductible of
R750 000,00, or one occurrence to which one deductible should
be
applied.
EVENTS
AFTER CLOSE OF PLEADINGS
[11]
On 30 October 2013, after close of pleadings, the plaintiff delivered
a request for particulars for trial. Chartis, not satisfied
with the
response, brought a compelling application, as well as an application
for the separation of the merits and quantum. Super
Group
counter-applied for a differently formulated separation, also aimed
at separating merits and quantum. On 27 November 2014,
Acting Judge
Gaibie refused both applications for separation, finding,
inter
alia
,
that the issues of merits and quantum appear to be inextricably
linked.
[1]
The compelling
application was, however, upheld. Super Group then delivered further
and better particulars.
[12]
Having regard to Super Group's replies, it was clear that Super Group
is not able to,(a) identify, individually and separately,
any
particular act of or occasion of theft; (b) is not able to identify,
individually and separately, each dishonest and fraudulent
act and is
unable to state how many dishonest and fraudulent acts were
committed; (c) is not able to identify, individually and
separately,
each dishonest and fraudulent act constituting such occurrence; (d)
is not able to designate the specific employees
responsible for such
thefts; (e) is not able to identify the employee involved or
implicated in each such theft; and, (f) is unable
to quantify the
individual amounts of each such loss.
[13]
Super Group also replied that:
1. It identified the acts
of theft by comparisons, from time to time, of the inventory
physically present in the plaintiff's warehouse
and the inventory
that ought to have been physically present which reflected
deficiencies.
2. There was at least
one, but not more than eleven occurrences of financial loss.
3.To the extent that
there might have been more than one syndicate operating independently
of each other, in each of the acts that
can be attributed to any
syndicate there was at least one employee involved or implicated in
all such acts.
[14]
In August 2015, Chartis launched an application to obtain leave to
deliver an exception in addition to, and after the delivery
of, its
plea. The application was enrolled for hearing on 4 November 2015. On
22 October 2015, Super Group delivered its answering
affidavit
together with an application for condonation. The answering affidavit
raised a number of factual allegations for the
first time in the
proceedings, including, that Super Group sought to rely on clause 11
of the Conditions of the policy, (the unidentifiable
employees’
clause), which provides:
"If a loss is
alleged to have been caused by the fraud or dishonesty of any of the
Employees and the Insured shall be unable
to designate the specific
Employee or Employees causing the loss, the Insured's claim in
respect of such loss shall not be invalidated
by their inability so
to do, provided the Insured is able to furnish evidence to prove to
the reasonable satisfaction of the Insurer
that the loss was in fact
by reason of and directly caused by one or more dishonest or
fraudulent acts of one (or more than one
acting in collusion) of the
Employees of the Insured wherever committed."
[15]
Super Group also averred that it is able to designate certain
employees as being significant role players in the syndicate,
and
that it will argue on the probabilities that there existed one
sophisticated syndicate that operated throughout the period
under the
ultimate control of one kingpin who may have been Samson Ntsala.
[16]
After receipt of the answering affidavit on 22 October 2015, Chartis
took the view that, in light of the new allegations and
the extensive
evidentiary material referred to in the answering affidavit, it was
not feasible to determine the issues identified
in the defendant's
application by way of exception. The exception was removed from the
opposed motion roll of 4 November 2015,
with a reservation of
Chartis' rights.
[17]
Chartis submits that it was anticipated that Super Group would then
progress the matter to trial and adduce the evidence set
out in the
answering affidavit, but it did not happen. It is submitted that
beyond attending judicial pre-trial conferences, Super
Group proved
itself incapable of progressing the matter to trial from October 2015
to the present time. It is further contended
that Super Group has
demonstrated that it is incapable of dealing with the issues of
liability and quantum together and despite
being cognisant of its
difficulties in relation to proving the quantum of its claim, it
failed to respond to Chartis' proposals
to deal with the extensive
stock records which it intends to prove at the hearing. The result is
a deadlock which is manifestly
prejudicial and unfair to Chartis: it
cannot force Super Group to trial on both issues and it cannot reduce
the ambit of what Super
Group would need to prove at trial by way of
a separation.
[18]
As a result, so it is argued, Chartis is patently prejudiced by the
plaintiff's failure to progress the matter. Chartis has
had to retain
a reserve for Super Group's in its books of account pending
finalisation of the claim since 2010, and the inordinate
and
unexplained delay has compromised the ability of both parties to
secure witnesses who have knowledge of the events which occurred
during 2006 to 2008. It is argued that it is in the interests of the
public and in the interests of the judicial system itself
that
litigation does not drag on interminably. Thus, unless the scope of
the issues is narrowed by way of the separation, Super
Group will not
progress the matter to trial, and Chartis will continue to be
prejudiced by Super Group's inability to meaningfully
progress the
matter to trial.
THE
PRESENT APLICATION
[19]
Chartis launched the current application for separation in July 2019.
Super Group’s answering affidavit asserts four
main grounds of
opposition: firstly, the parties previously agreed that the issues of
merits and quantum ought not to be separated
and "nothing has
changed"; secondly, the court per Gaibie AJ determined in
November 2014 that the issues of liability
and quantum were
inextricably linked; thirdly, the separation application is purely a
strategic manoeuvre on the part of Chartis;
and fourthly, the
proposed separation would be prejudicial to Super Group as the issues
are inextricably interwoven.
[20]
In my view, there is no merit in the first three grounds raised by
Super Group. Firstly, a period of five years has elapsed
since the
answering affidavit of 22 October 2015, with no progress towards
trial. Super Group has made no attempt to put before
court the
evidence alluded to in the affidavit. Secondly, Super Group failed to
fully set out the qualification in Gaibie AJ's
judgment. She
specifically stated that the position with regard to a determination
as to convenience may change once the further
particulars are
furnished by Super Group. Thirdly, the history of this matter is not
disputed by Super Group. The events demonstrate
tardiness and
perennial delay on the part of Super Group. It has offered no
explanation for its inordinate delay and inability
to progress the
matter to trial on both the issues of liability and quantum. More
particularly, no explanation is offered which
might lead one to
believe that Super Group will be more effective in the future than it
has been in the past.
[21]
This brings me to the fourth ground raised, namely that the issues of
liability and quantum are inextricably linked. Chartis
seeks an order
in terms of Rule 33(4) that the following issues are to be
determined, separately from and prior to the other issues
in the
action:
1.1.1. the issues raised
in paragraph 5 of the particulars of claim as read with paragraph 2
of the defendant's plea;
1.1.2. the issues raised
in paragraphs 6 and 7 of the particulars of claim read with paragraph
3.3 of the defendant's plea;
1.1.3. the issues raised
in paragraph 10 of the particulars of claim read with paragraph 5 of
the defendant's plea;
1.1.4. the issues raised
in paragraph 11 of the particulars of claim read with paragraph 5 of
the defendant's plea;
1.1.5. the issues raised
in paragraph 12 of the particulars of claim read with paragraph 6 of
the defendant's plea;
1.1.6. such issues raised
in paragraph 15 of the particulars of claim read with paragraph 8 of
the defendant's plea;
1.1.7. the issues raised
in paragraph 12 and 13 of the defendant's plea.
[22]
Super Group contends that the separation of issues proposed by
Chartis are ill-considered and inconvenient. It is contended
that, by
excluding paragraph 14 of the particulars of claim, which sets out
the quantum of the claim in the amount of R38 741 104,28,
[2]
Chartis seeks to exclude proof of the extent of Super Group's loss at
the first stage of the trial, even though it is inextricably
interwoven with the issue of what caused the loss. It is contended
that given the nature of the loss, there is no obvious line
between
evidence proving that a loss occurred and evidence proving the extent
of that loss. It is further submitted that the issues
raised in
paragraph 12.2 and 12.3 of the plea (12.2 Each incident of theft
constitutes an “occurrence" as that term
is used in the
policy. 12.3 Each incident of theft resulted in financial loss of no
more than R750 000,00 to the plaintiff) are
conditional on proof of
the allegations in paragraph 14 of the particulars of claim, and as a
result, these paragraphs cannot logically
be decided while the
allegations in paragraph 14 remain undecided.
[23]
Chartis holds the view that the policy does not respond until such
time as Super Group proves that particular occurrences of
theft over
the period March 2006 to May 2008 caused, in each case, a financial
loss in excess of R750 000,00. If a court ultimately
accepts
that each incident of theft constituted an occurrence for the
purposes of the policy, then the deductible of R750 000,00
per
indemnifiable occurrence would extinguish the plaintiff's claim.
[24]
As a result, one of the issues that the trial court would have to
determine is what should be considered an occurrence under
the
policy. In relation to insurance contracts it has been said that a
loss is not the same as an occurrence because one occurrence
may
embrace multiple losses.
[3]
The
circumstances of the losses would therefore have to be scrutinised to
determine whether they involve such a degree of unity
as to justify
their being described as arising out of one occurrence. In assessing
the degree of unity, regard must be had to such
factors as cause,
locality, time and the intentions of the human agents involved.
[4]
[25]
Both Chartis and Super Group approach this issue ("the
occurrence issue") on the basis that the relevant category
of
unifying factor to be considered is cause of loss. Chartis adopts the
view that the aggregate financial loss was caused by numerous
discrete thefts, each unconnected to any other. Super Group, on the
other hand, contends that each individual theft formed part
of a
series of happenings with the same originating cause — the
existence and direction of a syndicate (a multiplicity of
employees
acting in collusion to cause loss by a series of dishonest and
fraudulent acts.)
[26]
One then has to consider what evidence Super Group might present to
bring itself within the four corners of the policy. Firstly,
Super
Group does not intend to prove the number of thefts which occurred
over the period March 2006 to May 2008. Instead, Super
Group intends
on proving, by way of inference, that the
extent
of the loss
supports Super Group's allegation that the loss was caused by a
multiplicity of employees acting in collusion. In other
words, the
extent of its loss has probative value in relation to the
determination of the manner in which the loss occurred.
[27]
Secondly, Super Group contends that it will not be necessary to
designate the specific employee or employees causing the loss.
In
this regard, Super Group intends to prove that the loss could not
have been caused by discrete separate acts of theft carried
out on an
uncoordinated basis by employees acting independently, but, on the
probabilities, was caused by the co-ordinated activities
of a
syndicate. Although Super Group intends to present direct evidence on
these aspects, it also relies on a process of inferential
reasoning
flowing from the extent of its loss. Super Group has explained this
evidence in its answering affidavit in a previous
interlocutory
application as follows: The daily average rand value of loss
attributable to stock theft during the claim period
is R69 148.51.
Throughout the claim period Super Group had 400 employees (including
administrative and management staff) in the
warehouse plus 120
drivers. To reach a daily loss of R69 148. 51, each employee in the
warehouse would have had to steal two cases
of goods and one unit of
goods each and every working day throughout the claim period and each
driver would have had to steal three
cases of goods each and every
working day throughout the claim period. It will be argued that it
was impossible for each member
of staff to walk or drive out of Super
Park, undetected with two cases of stock and one unit of stock each
and every day. It is
also impossible for a driver acting alone to
steal three cases of stock each and every working day, because this
would be immediately
detected and would result in the generation of
between 120 and 360 credit notes per day throughout the claim period,
which did
not occur.
[28]
The conclusion that Super Group will argue for on the basis of this
evidence is that a loss of this magnitude could only have
occurred if
a number of employees working in different parts of the warehouse had
co-ordinated their efforts to beat the security
checks and balances
built into the Super Group business process. It is contended that
this evidence will disprove the allegation
by Chartis that the loss
was caused by discrete individual acts of theft.
[29]
On this basis alone, evidence of the full extent of the plaintiff's
loss would be admissible in any trial where the issues
raised in
paragraphs 10 and 11 of the particulars of claim and paragraphs 12.2
and 12.3 of the plea are to be decided. The facts
regarding the full
extent of Super Group's loss forms part of the
facta probanda
in relation to the issue raised in paragraph 14 of the particulars of
claim, but are also part of the
facta probantia
in relation to
the allegations in paragraphs 10 and 11 of the particulars of claim.
Super Group is therefore entitled to and intends
to prove the full
quantum of its loss in the course of proving its case regarding the
cause of the loss.
[30]
Upon establishing this, Super Group would have proved a financial
loss caused by dishonest and fraudulent acts of many employees
acting
in collusion. It is contended that Super Group's task would be made
easier if the trial court finds, on balance of probabilities,
that at
least one employee participated in the syndicate's activities
throughout the period, because in that case proviso 2(b)
applies. It
is, however, submitted that Super Group does not have to rely on
proviso 2(b) to prove a single occurrence of financial
loss totalling
R38 741 104. 28. To prove its pleaded case it must prove that a
syndicate caused the loss, whether or not proviso
2(b) applies. If it
proves that a syndicate caused the loss, then the trial court may
very well find that at least one employee
was a member of the
syndicate throughout the identified period. It is therefore argued
that Super Group can prove the existence
and operation of a syndicate
(and the likelihood that at least one member of the syndicate was
involved the identified period)
by inference from secondary facts.
The size of the loss is however a relevant secondary fact in relation
to this enquiry.
[31]
On that account, because the evidence of the extent of the loss is
relevant to establishing the cause of the loss these two
issues are
inextricably interwoven. They are inextricably interwoven because the
same evidence would be relevant to a determination
of both the extent
and the cause of the loss, and the determination of the one issue has
a material effect on how the other issue
should be decided. The court
would not be able to reliably determine the one issue without
simultaneously determining the other.
[32]
The Supreme Court of Appeal has emphasised that in many cases once
properly considered the issues will be found to be inextricably
linked even though at first sight they might appear to be discrete.
See
Denel
(Pty) Ltd v Vorster
2004 (4) SA 481 (SCA).
[5]
This
is such a case. The court hearing the first part of a trial separated
as Chartis proposes, would not be able to evaluate Super
Group's
arguments regarding the inferences to be drawn from the extent of its
loss without first deciding whether it indeed suffered
losses of that
magnitude.
CONCLUSION
[33]
This court must be satisfied that it is convenient to try an issue
separately before granting a separation order. In doing
so the court
must weigh up the advantages and disadvantages that are likely to
flow from each alternative course of action.
[34]
It is not convenient to separate issues that are inextricably
interwoven. Even if Chartis accepts and agree that there was
a loss,
the occurrence of loss, causation and extent of loss are inextricably
interwoven.
[35]
It is also inherently inconvenient and undesirable to separate issues
where the same evidence is relevant to a determination
of both of
them. This is wasteful of costs and judicial resources. On the other
hand, the status of evidence led at the first part
of a divided trial
as
facta probantia
is unclear. The separation order will give
rise to unnecessary procedural arguments over what evidence is
admissible at the first
part of the trial, and may not result in any
shortening of the first part of the trial at all.
[36]
Although Super Group has not taken active steps to progress the
matter to trial since March 2017, a separation in terms of
Rule 33(4)
is not a punishment for procedural non-compliance or delay. The
wording of Rule 33(4) makes it clear that the sole test
for
separation of issues is convenience, and the decided cases establish
that this requires an assessment of what is appropriate
and fair to
all parties and the court. A defendant in Chartis' position has a
number of procedural remedies available to it to
force progress or,
failing such progress, to bring the litigation to an end. In the
interim, the matter has also been allocated
to a judge to case manage
the matter. Super Group contends that although it has not yet filed
its witness statements, there is
detailed evidence contained in
numerous reports submitted to Chartis during the claims
administration process. These reports have
been discovered and the
millions of pages of supporting documentation are available for
inspection.
[37]
In the result the following order is made:
1. The application is
dismissed with costs.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned)
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 12 July 2022.
APPEARANCES
Attorney
for the applicant/defendant:
Clyde & Co Inc.
Counsel
for the applicant/defendant:
Adv. C. Loxton SC
Adv. G. Goedhart SC
Attorney
for the respondent/plaintiff:
Gary G. Mazaham Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent/plaintiff:
Adv. A. Lamplough SC
Date
of hearing:
13 April 2022
Date
of judgment:
12 July 2022
[1]
Paragraph 29 of the judgment of Acting Judge Gaibie dated 27
November 2014.
[2]
Colgate: R14 766 602,82; Kimberly-Clarke: R16 659 392,59; Unilever:
R11 169 488, 49; SUB-TOTAL: R42 595 463,90; LESS RECOVERIES:
R
3 854 379 62; TOTAL: R38 741 104, 28.
[3]
In relation to insurance contracts it has been said that a loss is
not the same as an occurrence because one occurrence may embrace
multiple losses. See
Kuwait
Airways Corporation and the Minister of Finance for the State of
Kuwait v Kuwait insurance Co. SAK and Others
[1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep at 686.
[4]
Ibid.
[5]
At paragraph 3. See also
Consolidated
News Agencies (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) v Mobile Telephone Networks
(Pty) Ltd and Another
2010 (3) SA 382
(SCA) at paragraph 90.
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