Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 585South Africa
Blackspear Holding (PTY) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Limited and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 585 (22 August 2022)
Headnotes
HEADNOTE:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Blackspear Holding (PTY) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Limited and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 585 (22 August 2022)
Blackspear Holding (PTY) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Limited and Another (26150/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 585 (22 August 2022)
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sino date 22 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NUMBER: 26150/2020
DATE
OF HEARING:19 August 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
2022/08/22
In
the matters between:
BLACK
SPEAR HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
BRYTE
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
First Defendant
SASRIA
SOC
LIMITED
Second Defendant
This
judgment has been delivered by being uploaded to the caselines
profile on 22 August 2022 at 10h00 and communicated to the parties
by
email.
JUDGMENT
HEADNOTE:
Contract
of insurance – interpretation of clause delineating the scope
of compensation and mode of calculation
The
claim was for the total loss of mining equipment lost by the flooding
of the mine and the absence of any reasonable expectation
that it
could be recovered – the controversy was whether the notional
cost of removal from the site underground was to be
factored into the
sum of compensation
Held:
the clause as applied to the facts required the costs of a
theoretical removal not to be included
.
SUTHERLAND
DJP:
[1]
The issue for decision is the proper meaning to be attributed to a
clause in a contract
of insurance. A stated case has been presented.
[2]
The relevant portion of the clause reads:
‘
2. Total loss
In the event that the
insured property is totally lost or destroyed the amount payable
shall be the cost of removing the damaged
property (limited to the
removal costs of 15% of the claim) less the value of the remains plus
(a)
…cost of replacing or reinstating on the same site property of
equal performance
capacity and age but not superior to or more
extensive than the insured item insofar as is practicable…
[3]
The policy is in respect of mining equipment located underground. In
the trial which
preceded this application, it was established that
the mine was flooded and the workings, by reason thereof, are
inaccessible.
[4]
In the stated case the common cause relevant facts are:
(a) The plaintiff has
suffered a total loss
(b) It is uneconomical to
recover the insured property from the underground mine
(c) The plaintiff will
not be indemnified for the cost of removing the insured equipment
from where they are in situ in the underground
mine and
(d) The insured equipment
has no residual value.
[5]
The purpose of a contract of insurance is to recognise the
predicament of the insured
party and provide compensation
commensurate with the loss. In every case the terms of the policy
must be applied to the relevant
facts. More especially, a contract of
insurance concluded to provide cover for equipment situated
underground must be taken to
have contemplated the circumstances of
such goods.
[1]
Moreover, in the
event that a band of plausible interpretations might exist the option
most favourable to the insured person or
entity must prevail.
[2]
[6]
The controversy between the parties relates to single point of
difference about the
modality of the valuation: must the sum of
compensation take account of the costs of removing the equipment from
the underground
site or not.
[7]
An examination of the text of the clause reveals the following:
(1) The conception of a
total ‘loss’ or total ‘destruction’ relates
to the
utility
of the insured goods and does not necessarily
mean that the goods have literally ‘disappeared’. This
construction accommodates
the notion of residual value in the scrap.
(2) In instances where
scrap is accessible and might have another use of however modest a
nature, it self-evidently has a residual
value which can be set off
against the utility value of the goods. However, where the scrap is
inaccessible this factor can have
no practical application.
(3) The valuer must
conceptualise what would be needed to replace the goods at the place
where they were located. This encompasses
the notional assumption
that the goods would typically be acquired at some other place and
moved onto site at a cost to be taken
into account. Were such a
typical source for the acquisition of the relevant goods be overseas
or next door, that dimension would
be factored into the calculation
at the differential cost. But self-evidently where no contemplation
of actually, as distinct from
notionally, replacing the insured
goods, the aspect of a removal can play no role in the valuer’s
calculations and the clause
cannot be read to imply that such a
factor must, in every case, be careered for. The striving for
business sense must prevail.
[8]
In such circumstances as the stated case has set out, the reasonable
valuer would
put a value on the goods without regard to the factor of
removal costs and that outcome would be consistent with the proper
interpretation
of the clause.
[9]
The appropriate order is therefore set out in paragraph 10 of the
stated case.
The
order
(1)
The second defendant must make payment to the plaintiff of the amount
of R6491750, inclusive
of VAT.
(2)
Interest thereon at the rate of 13.5% per annum from 27 March 2017
until date of payment.
(3)
Costs of this part of the action including the costs of the plaintiff
expert witness Hans
Kamp.
Sutherland
DJP
Heard:
2022 08 19
Judgment:
2022 08 22
For
the Plaintiff
Adv
R Shepstone,
Instructed
by Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
For
the Second Defendant
Adv
P Coetsee,
Instructed
by Stegmanns
[1]
In
Centriq
Insurance Company Ltd v Oosthuizen and Another
2019 (3) SA 387
(SCA)
at
[17]
it was held: ‘….. It is therefore necessary to revisit
the approach to interpreting insurance contracts. As the
learned
judge observed, insurance contracts are contracts like any other and
must be construed by having regard to their language,
context and
purpose in what is a unitary exercise. A commercially sensible
meaning is to be adopted instead of one that is insensible
or at
odds with the purpose of the contract. The analysis is
objective and is aimed at establishing what the parties must
be
taken to have intended, having regard to the words they used in the
light of the document as a whole and of the factual matrix
within
which they concluded the contract.’
[2]
Guardrisk
Insurance Co Ltd v Café Chameleon CC
2021 (2) SA 323
(SCA
)
at para [13]
‘In
this analysis it must be borne in mind that insurance contracts are
'contracts of indemnity'. They should therefore
be interpreted
'reasonably and fairly to this end'. In this regard it is
instructive to recall Schreiner JA's adoption of
the following
statement from the English authorities on insurance law:
'No
rule, in the interpretation of a policy, is more firmly established,
or more imperative and controlling, than that, in all
cases, it must
be liberally construed in favour of the insured, so as not to defeat
without a plain necessity his claim to the
indemnity, which in
making the insurance, it was his object to secure. When the words
are, without violence, susceptible of two
interpretations, that
which will sustain the claim and cover the loss, must in preference
be adopted.'
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