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and
DISCOVERY INSURE LTD Respondent/ Defendant
This judgment was handed down remotely by uploading on caselines. Its date of delivery
shall be deemed to be 12 September 2025
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ORDER
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1. The application succeeds.
2. Each party pays their own costs.
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JUDGMENT
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Bam J
Introduction
1. This is an opposed application in terms of Rule 28 (4) of the Uniform Rules.
The application is brought against the background of an action in which the
applicant is the plaintiff. For ease of reference, I refer to the parties as they
are in the action. The plaintiff served a notice of intention to amend her
particulars of claim on 12 December 2024 upon the defendant. The defendant
objected to the proposed amendment on 27 January 2025, on the basis that
the particulars will remain excipiable as they disclose no cause of action and
or they are vague and embarrassing.
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Background
2. The plaintiff concluded an insurance agreement on 30 January 2021. In terms
of the agreement, the defendant insured the plaintiff’s vehicle against perils
such as theft, hijacking and damages. The defendant’s obligation to
indemnify the plaintiff is conditional as set out in the clause below:
‘Theft and hijacking cover is conditional upon the installation of a Discovery Insure
Crowd/Search motor vehicle tracking device. This device must be in full working
order at all times. There will be no cover if this is not done.’
3. A condition is distinguished from a term of a contract. That distinction is
articulated in Parsons Transport (Pty) Ltd v Global Insurance Ltd, with
reference to Resisto Dairy (Pty) Ltd v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd 1963
(1) 632 (A) 644E-F, as follows:
‘a condition is sharply distinguished from the actual terms of a contract, and is
taken to mean, not part of the obligation itself, but an external fact upon which the
existence of the obligation depends. . . .
The orthodox application of the word is by no means unknown to English lawyers.
An obligation or a right, suspended until the happening of a stated event, is said
in the common law to be subject to a condition precedent.’1
4. On 14 November 2023, the plaintiff lodged a claim for her stolen vehicle. The
claim was rejected by the defendant. On 27 November 2024, the plaintiff
served the defendant with a summons. The claim was met with an exception,
on the basis that the particulars of claim disclose no cause of action and or
were vague and embarrassing. On 12 December 2024, the plaintiff delivered
1 (345/2004) [2005] ZASCA 95; 2006 (1) SA 488 (SCA) (29 September 2005), paragraph 5.
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a notice of intention to amend her particulars of claim, but the defendant
objected stating that the particulars of claim will remain excipiable even after
the proposed amendment. The present application was instituted on 5 May
2025.
The plaintiff’s particulars of claim prior to the amendment [leaving out parts of
the claim that do not deal with the condition]
5. The relevant paragraphs read:
‘3.2 The express alternatively implied further alternatively tacit terms of the
agreement [were]:
3.2.1 That the Defendant will [i]nsure and indemnify the Plaintiff against theft,
general damage and perils of the vehicle on the retail value of the vehicle;
3.2.2 That the plaintiff will pay a monthly premium for the cover and
indemnification;
3.2.3 That the plaintiff will fit an approved tracking device in the vehicle.
3.3 Attached is the Discovery Policy xxxxx
3.4 The plaintiff duly performed in terms of the agreement in that the monthly
premiums were paid up to date and the vehicle was fitted with an approved
tracking device.
4.1 In terms of the Policy Schedule the defendant will cover the vehicle in case of
theft and hijack conditional upon installation of the Discovery Insure Crowd Search
motor vehicle tracking device and DQ-Track.
4.2 The 2 units were installed on 31 March 2021 in accordance with the
specifications as requested by the defendant.
6.1 The defendant repudiated the claim on 24 November 2023 on the grounds that
the Crowd Search Device is faulty and would not provide sufficient cover.
6.2 The repudiation was based on an alleged e-mail sent to the plaintiff informing
the plaintiff that the Crowd Search Device is faulty prior to the theft. The plaintiff
never received such email.’
6. In terms of the proposed amendment, the particulars will read: I highlight the
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changes.
‘In addition to Paragraphs 3.2 to 4.2, 6.1 and 6.2 set out as in paragraph 5 above,
the ff is added:
‘4.3 At all material times the plaintiff was under the understanding that the
tracking device was in good and working condition.
6.3 At all material times the plaintiff acted in accordance with the policy in
that it had a working Crowd Device fitted to her vehicle. ’
Summary of the parties’ submissions
7. The plaintiff submits that her cause of action is premised on: (i) the existence
of a valid insurance agreement; (2) compliance with the agreement by the
insured (the plaintiff); (3) repudiation by the insurer (defendant); (4) the
insured not accepting the repudiation and instead enforcing the contract; (5)
damages suffered due to the repudiation; and (6) a causal link between the
repudiation and the damages claimed. Thus, according to the plaintiff, the
proposed amendment sets out the necessary facta probanda and thus
substantiates a cause of action.
8. She submits that there is no requirement in law for her to plead that the device
must be in full working order at all times as the defendant insists. The onus
to prove compliance with the prescribed installation rests on the plaintiff and
the defendant is free to attract the onus of the ‘full working order’ defence.
She points out that her cause of action remains unaltered by the proposed
amendment and is exactly the same cause of action that was pleaded in the
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original particulars of claim. She submits that the amendment will not cause
any prejudice to the defendant and that the latter will still have the opportunity
to except to the amended particulars of claim in the event it is so inclined.
She adds that the defendant has yet to deliver its plea. As to her choice of
replacing the entire particulars of claim as opposed to inserting individual
paragraphs, the plaintiff suggests that this is a neater way of effecting an
amendment and she is entitled to utilise this option in terms of Rule 28.
9. The defendant submits that what needs to be alleged and proved by the
plaintiff is that the device was in full working order at all times. The failure to
plead this allegation, so it is said, has the result that the plaintiff cannot even
plead that the condition was met. Consequently, no obligation arises for the
defendant to act. The defendant relies on Eagle Star Insurance v Willey2
where the court said that the insured must frame their case in such a manner
as to bring their claim within the four corners of the promises made to them.
The defendant adds that at the heart of this case is the question whether the
obligation to indemnify the plaintiff arose for the defendant, given that the
plaintiff had to meet a condition in order for the contract to impose such
obligation.
10. Dealing with the first proposed amendment which reads, ‘At all material times
the plaintiff was under the understanding that the tracking device was in good
and working condition’, the defendant submits that this allegation sets out the
2 1956 (1) SA 330 (A).
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plaintiff’s opinion rather than the factual allegation that the condition has been
met. The allegation, so it is said, does not address that the device ‘was in full
working order at all times’. On the second proposed amendment which reads,
‘At all material times the plaintiff acted in accordance with the policy in that it
ha[d] a working Crowd Device fitted to her vehicle’, the defendant submits
that the allegation deals with the state of the device at the time of installation.
This proposed amendment according to the defendant does not allege that
the device was in full working order at all times but only that it was in working
order. The allegation, submits the defendant, is insufficient to demonstrate
that the condition has been met. The plaintiff, according to the defendant, has
failed to plead that the condition has been met and accordingly no obligation
on the part of the defendant can exist and the pleadings remain excipiable.
Applicable legal principles
11. The general rule pertaining to amendment of pleadings is that the court has
a discretion, which must be exercised judiciously. In Caxton Ltd and Others
v Reeva Forman (Pty) Ltd and Another, the rule was articulated thus:
‘Although the decision whether to grant or refuse an application to amend a
pleading rests in the discretion of the court, this discretion must be exercised with
due regard to certain basic principles. These principles are well summed up in…
Trans-Drakensberg Bank Ltd (Under Judicial Management) v Combined
Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another 1967 (3) SA 632 (D), at 640 H - 641 C…:
"Having already made his case in his pleading, if he wishes to change or add to
this, he must explain the reason and show prima facie that he has something
deserving of consideration, a triable issue; he cannot be allowed to harass his
opponent by an amendment which has no foundation. He cannot place on the
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record an issue for which he has no supporting evidence, where evidence is
required, or, save perhaps in exceptional circumstances, introduce an amendment
which would make the pleading excipiable.”3 ( the underline is mine)
12. In Whittaker v Roos and Another; Morant v Roos and Another:
‘This court has the greatest latitude in granting amendments, and it is very
necessary that it should have. The object of the court is to do justice between the
parties. It is not a game we are are playing, in which if some mistake is made, the
forfeit is claimed. We are here for the purpose of seeing that we have a true
account of what actually took place, and we are not going to give a decision upon
what we know to be wrong facts.'4
13. In Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another, it
was said that:
‘…The practical rule that emerges from these cases is that amendments will
always be allowed unless the amendment is mala fide (made in bad faith) or
unless the amendment will cause an injustice to the other side which cannot be
cured by an appropriate order for costs, or “unless the parties cannot be put back
for the purposes of justice in the same position as they were when the pleading
which it is sought to amend was filed.” These principles apply equally to a Notice
of Motion. The question in each case, therefore, is what do the interests of justice
demand.’5
14. In Vinpro NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others, it was
said:
‘On this score, it is trite law: that a court is vested with a discretion as to whether
to grant or refuse an amendment: that an amendment cannot be granted for the
3 (393/88) [1990] ZASCA 47; 1990 (3) SA 547 (AD); [1990] 2 All SA 300 (A) (17 May 1990).
4 1911 TPD 1092 at 1102-1103.
5 (CCT27/04) [2005] ZACC 3; 2006 (3) SA 247 (CC); 2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC) (11 March 2005), paragraph
9.
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mere asking thereof: that some explanation must be offered therefor: that this
explanation must be in the founding affidavit filed in support of the amendment
application: that if the amendment is not sought timeously, some reason must be
given for the delay: that that party seeking the amendment must show prima facie
that the amendment has something deserving of consideration: that the party
seeking the amendment must not be mala fide: that the amendment must not be
the cause an injustice to the other side which cannot be compensated by
costs: that the amendment should not be refused simply to punish the applicant
for neglect and that mere loss of time is no reason, in itself, for refusing the
application.’ 6
15. It is a well settled rule that pleadings must be read as a whole and that an
exception cannot be taken to a paragraph or a part of a pleading that is not
self-contained, Living Hands (Pty) Ltd NO and Another v Ditz and Others7. In
Lizinex (Pty) Limited v FPC Solutions (Pty) Limited and Others, it was said
that a pleading must cause serious prejudice to the excipient, to warrant an
exception to be upheld.8
16. A plaintiff’s cause of action, as described in Varachia v Enver NO, with
reference to McKenzie v Farmers' Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd refers to,
‘every fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed,
in order to support [their] right to judgment of the Court’9. In Crawford-Brunt v
Kavnat and Another10, it was said that where it appears that the pleading may
be open to exception or if the court is of the opinion that the question whether
6 (1741/2021) [2021] ZAWCHC 261 (3 December 2021), paragraph 25.
7 (42728/2012) [2012] ZAGPJHC 218; 2013 (2) SA 368 (GSJ) (11 September 2012).
8 (2022/17136) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1261 (3 November 2023, paragraph 27.
9 (28658/2008) [2023] ZAGPJHC 878 (7 August 2023) paragraph 22.
10 1927 COP 27 at 29.
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the pleading is excipiable is arguable, it should still allow the amendment.
Discussion
17. The issue before this court is not whether liability on the part of the defendant
has been triggered but whether, in the exercise of this court’s discretion, the
proposed amendment qualifies to be allowed, regard being heard to the dicta
in Caxton Ltd and Others v Reeva Forman (Pty) Ltd and Another, (see
paragraph 11 of this judgment). I am satisfied that amendment meets the
qualities set out in Caxton. The parties are at the early stages of this litigation
and the defendant has yet to deliver its plea. Thus, I am satisfied that there
will be no unfairness or prejudice to the defendant in allowing the
amendment. As to the defendant’s submission that the particulars will still be
excipiable after the amendment is effected, this is a matter for the defendant
to carefully assess going forward.
Discussion on Costs
18. As a basic rule, costs are a matter for the discretion of the presiding judicial
officer. The court in Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others
v Powell NO and Others11, makes this point plain:
‘The Supreme Court has, over the years, developed a flexible approach to costs
which proceeds from two basic principles, the first being that the award of costs,
unless expressly otherwise enacted, is in the discretion of the presiding judicial
officer and the second that the successful party should, as a general rule, have
his or her costs. Even this second principle is subject to the first.’
11 (CT5/95) [1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC); 1996 (4) BCLR 441 (CC) (19 March 1996), paragraph
3.
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19. I have carefully weighed the circumstances of this case and I have come to
the conclusion that, notwithstanding the plaintiff’s success, it will not be in
the interests of justice to award costs.
Order
(i) The application succeeds.
(ii) Each party pays their own costs.
—————
N.N BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date of Hearing: 08 September 2025
Date of Judgment: 12 September 2025
Appearances:
Counsel for the Applicant: Adv P.J.A Griesel
Instructed by: Cremer Attorneys
Brooklyn, Pretoria
Counsel for the Respondent: Adv A.R Whitaker
Instructed by: Keith Sutcliffe & Associates Inc.
c/o Andrea Rae Attorneys
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Colbyn, Pretoria