Coetzee v Attorneys' Insurance Indemnity Fund (126/2001) [2002] ZASCA 94; [2002] 4 All SA 509 (SCA) [2002] 4 All SA 1 (SCA) (2 September 2002)

80 Reportability
Insurance Law

Brief Summary

Indemnity insurance — Limitation clause — Interpretation of indemnity policy — Claim for costs included within policy limit — Section 156 of Insolvency Act allowing direct action against indemnifying insurer — Appellant Coetzee suffered injuries and claimed against attorney Botha, whose estate was sequestrated — Coetzee's claim for capital limited to R1 million, but he contended costs recoverable in addition — Court held that both capital and costs are subject to the R1 million limit, interpreting policy provisions and the effect of the Insolvency Act.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an appeal in the Supreme Court of Appeal concerning the interpretation and operation of a limitation of liability clause in a professional indemnity insurance policy, and the interaction between that clause and the statutory direct-action mechanism created by section 156 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 following the sequestration of the insured’s estate.


The appellant was Phillipus Petrus Nicolaas Coetzee, a third-party claimant who had suffered loss due to his attorney’s negligence. The respondent was the Attorneys’ Insurance Indemnity Fund (the Fund), the professional indemnity insurer of the negligent attorney.


The litigation had an extended procedural course. Coetzee sued his attorney for damages and costs after the attorney’s negligence caused Coetzee’s earlier delictual claim to prescribe. Before the matter proceeded to trial, the attorney’s estate was sequestrated. Pursuant to section 156, and by agreement following a suggestion by the trial court, the Fund was substituted as the defendant. The merits were determined in Coetzee’s favour and costs were awarded against the Fund. Quantum was later agreed, but a discrete dispute remained: whether Coetzee’s recoverable costs were payable in addition to the policy limit of R1 million, or whether capital and costs together were capped at R1 million.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was therefore the extent of the Fund’s monetary liability under the policy (as read with section 156), specifically whether the policy limit applied only to the damages component or also encompassed the third party’s litigation costs.


2. Material Facts


Coetzee sustained serious injuries when he slipped on a wet floor at the home of Schmidt in Welkom. He had a potential delictual claim against Schmidt of approximately R1.5 million. Coetzee instructed an attorney, Botha, to institute proceedings on his behalf.


Botha acted negligently by allowing Coetzee’s claim against Schmidt to prescribe. As a result, Coetzee sued Botha for the amount he alleged he would have recovered from Schmidt, together with costs. Botha held a professional indemnity policy issued by the Fund, containing a limit of indemnity of R1,000,000.


Before the trial commenced, Botha’s estate was finally sequestrated (9 January 1997). Shortly before trial, Coetzee sought to amend his pleadings to substitute the trustee, but the trial court proposed (and the parties accepted) substitution of the Fund as defendant under section 156. The merits and quantum were separated. On the merits, Coetzee succeeded, and the court ordered costs against the Fund; costs were later taxed in the amount of R49,619.13, though this taxed amount was not the full measure of Coetzee’s recoverable costs.


Quantum was thereafter agreed, except for the question whether Coetzee’s costs fell within the R1 million policy limit (which would reduce the damages portion correspondingly) or were recoverable in addition to the R1 million. The combined sum of agreed quantum and Coetzee’s recoverable costs exceeded R1 million. The dispute reached the Supreme Court of Appeal after conflicting decisions in the court below, with special leave to appeal having been granted.


The Supreme Court of Appeal treated the material facts as essentially common cause; the dispute turned on the proper interpretation of the policy and the legal effect of section 156 in the sequestration context.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine two central legal questions.


The first question was one of contractual interpretation, namely whether, on a proper construction of the indemnity policy—particularly clause 3.1—the phrase limiting liability in respect of “all claims and claimants’ costs and expenses and Approved Costs” meant that the Fund’s total liability for both damages and the claimant’s costs could not exceed R1 million, or whether only the damages component was capped at that figure.


The second question concerned the application of a statutory provision to the insurance contract. It was whether, even if the policy’s limitation clause included costs, section 156 of the Insolvency Act altered the position by enabling a third party claimant to recover costs in excess of the contractual limit, on the footing that section 156 introduced a new statutory defendant (the insurer) who was not bound by the insured’s contractual limitation in relation to the third party’s costs of enforcing the section 156 right.


The issues were primarily questions of law (interpretation of the policy and the statute), and secondarily application of those legal conclusions to the agreed procedural posture (the substitution of the Fund and the making of costs orders).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The majority judgment (Schutz JA, with Nienaber JA, Navsa JA, Mthiyane JA concurring) approached the matter by first determining the contractual meaning of the limitation clause. It identified clause 3.1 as the operative limitation provision, which expressly capped the insurer’s liability for “all claims and claimants’ costs and expenses and Approved Costs” arising out of one event, at the schedule limit of R1 million. The judgment analysed the structure of the policy’s indemnity grants in clause 1, including the distinction between cover for the insured’s legal liability to third parties (clause 1.1) and “Approved Costs” incurred by the insured with written consent (clause 1.2, defined in clause 2.3).


On the question whether Coetzee’s costs were covered by the indemnity at all, the majority reasoned that costs formed part of Botha’s “legal liability” to Coetzee flowing from delictual liability: a claim for costs is implicitly included in a claim for damages, whether or not expressly pleaded, and excluding such costs from cover would be commercially and practically unbusinesslike. In support of that businesslike interpretive approach, the judgment cited M Zahn Investments (Pty) Ltd v General Accident Insurance of South Africa Ltd 1981 (4) SA 143 (SECLD).


The majority then dealt directly with the limitation clause. It held that the words “claimants’ costs and expenses” in clause 3.1 plainly referred to the third party claimant’s costs (Coetzee), not the insured’s costs. The judgment emphasised that interpreting the clause otherwise would undermine the function of a limit of indemnity, since excluding claimants’ costs from the cap would “hole” the limit and affect premium-setting. It therefore concluded that Coetzee’s costs were included in the R1 million cap, together with the capital component of the claim and the insured’s “Approved Costs”.


Coetzee had further argued that clause 6.10 (a “Conditions” clause) had the effect of allowing the insurer to pay the limit but remain liable thereafter “except for the payment of costs and expenses of litigation incurred prior to the date of payment”, which was said to create a positive entitlement to costs over and above the limit. The majority rejected this. It reasoned that conditions typically qualify liability rather than expand it, and that the “except for” wording functioned like a proviso, not as an enacting clause that increased the indemnity limit. In this context, the court relied on interpretive observations in S v Mhlanga and Others [1995] ZACC 4; 1995 (3) SA 867 (CC), which in turn referenced R v Dibdin [1910] P 57 and Mphosi v Central Board for Co-operative Insurance Ltd 1974 (4) SA 634 (A). On the majority’s reading, clause 6.10 served a practical purpose: it enabled the insurer to pay out (up to the limit) and withdraw from further conduct of the defence without escaping liability for litigation costs incurred up to that point. It did not alter the overall cap in clause 3.1, and there was no textual indication that clause 6.10 was intended to qualify clause 3.1 “notwithstanding” its terms.


Turning to section 156, the majority adopted the approach articulated in Le Roux v Standard General Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk 2000 (4) SA 1035 (SCA). It explained that section 156 gives a third party creditor a direct right of action against an indemnifying insurer after sequestration, thereby preventing policy proceeds from being absorbed into the insolvent estate for the benefit of general creditors. However, the majority stressed that the section was not intended to give the third party a better right than the insured would have had against the insurer. In line with Le Roux and with supportive discussion in Woodley v Guardian Assurance Co of SA Ltd 1976 (1) SA 758 (W) and Canadian Superior Oil Ltd v Concord Insurance Co Ltd (formerly INA Insurance Co Ltd) 1992 (4) SA 263 (W), the majority held that the third party must show that the insured would have been able to enforce indemnity under the policy and remains subject to the policy’s limits and conditions.


The majority rejected the argument that section 156 created a distinct or enlarged liability for costs by reason of the statutory substitution of the insurer as defendant. It reasoned that section 156 expressly limits recovery to “not exceeding the maximum amount for which the insurer has bound himself to indemnify the insured”, which necessarily incorporates the policy terms, including the limitation clause. It considered and dismissed policy-based concerns that insurers might protract litigation so as to consume the indemnity limit through costs; it regarded such a scenario as unlikely and, in any event, not a basis for reading section 156 as increasing liability beyond the contractual cap. The majority also rejected an argument that taxed costs pursuant to a court order constituted a separate source of liability that should sit outside the cap, holding that the issue was not the existence of liability but whether those costs must be deducted from the capped amount; since they formed part of Coetzee’s costs, they were included within the limit.


A minority judgment by Marais JA disagreed. It framed the relevant costs as those awarded against the Fund because it wrongfully resisted payment, characterising them as extraneous to the policy, not as costs governed by the policy’s indemnity and limitation structure. In the minority’s view, the policy dealt with the insured’s defence costs and with costs orders against the insured, whereas the costs in question arose from the Fund’s own unsuccessful opposition as a litigant under section 156. The minority considered that an insurer resisting a section 156 claim should bear ordinary litigation consequences, including adverse costs orders, and that denying such costs would undermine the protective purpose of section 156 by diminishing what the claimant would have received had the insurer paid what was due without litigation. The minority referred, by way of analogy, to Nairn South East Lancashire Insurance Co 1930 SC 606 in discussing dominus litis considerations in such disputes.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal, by majority, dismissed the appeal. It upheld the view that the Fund’s liability for damages and Coetzee’s recoverable costs together was limited to the policy’s R1 million limit, and that section 156 did not permit recovery beyond that contractual maximum.


The court therefore refused Coetzee’s contention that his costs were payable in addition to the R1 million. The appeal was dismissed with costs.


The minority would have allowed the appeal with costs, but that view did not prevail.


Cases Cited


Coetzee v Vrywaringsversekeringsfonds Vir Prokureurs 2000 (2) SA 262 (O).


Vrywaringsversekeringsfonds Vir Prokureurs v Coetzee 2001 (4) SA 1273 (O).


M Zahn Investments (Pty) Ltd v General Accident Insurance of South Africa Ltd 1981 (4) SA 143 (SECLD).


S v Mhlanga and Others [1995] ZACC 4; 1995 (3) SA 867 (CC).


R v Dibdin [1910] P 57.


Mphosi v Central Board for Co-operative Insurance Ltd 1974 (4) SA 634 (A).


Le Roux v Standard General Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk 2000 (4) SA 1035 (SCA).


Woodley v Guardian Assurance Co of SA Ltd 1976 (1) SA 758 (W).


Canadian Superior Oil Ltd v Concord Insurance Co Ltd (formerly INA Insurance Co Ltd) 1992 (4) SA 263 (W).


Nairn South East Lancashire Insurance Co 1930 SC 606.


Legislation Cited


Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, section 156.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, properly interpreted, the indemnity policy’s limitation clause capped the insurer’s liability in respect of the third party’s claim including the claimant’s costs and expenses and the insured’s approved costs, at the R1 million limit of indemnity.


The court further held that section 156 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 confers a direct right of action on the third party against the insurer upon sequestration of the insured’s estate, but it does not enlarge the insurer’s liability beyond “the maximum amount for which the insurer has bound himself to indemnify the insured” under the policy. Accordingly, section 156 did not entitle the claimant to recover costs in excess of the policy limit.


The appeal was dismissed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A limitation of liability clause in an indemnity policy must be interpreted contextually and in a manner consistent with commercial purpose. Where the policy language includes “claimants’ costs and expenses” within the limiting provision, those words are capable of encompassing the third party claimant’s litigation costs, with the practical effect that capital and costs may be aggregated for purposes of applying the limit.


Costs may form part of the insured’s “legal liability” to a third party in delictual litigation, and a claim for costs is ordinarily implicit in a damages claim. Excluding costs from cover, or from a clearly worded limitation clause, may be commercially unbusinesslike and inconsistent with the policy structure, depending on the text used.


A clause framed as a condition using “except for” language may operate as a proviso rather than as a substantive extension of cover. In the absence of clear textual indicators that such a clause is intended to qualify or override the principal limitation clause, it will not be read as increasing the maximum indemnity.


Section 156 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 provides a third party creditor with a direct action against an insurer upon sequestration of the insured’s estate, but it does not confer a better right than the insured had under the policy. The third party’s recovery remains confined to the maximum indemnity to which the insured was contractually entitled, subject to the policy’s terms, limits, and conditions.

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[2002] ZASCA 94
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Coetzee v Attorneys' Insurance Indemnity Fund (126/2001) [2002] ZASCA 94; [2002] 4 All SA 509 (SCA); [2002] 4 All SA 1 (SCA); 2003 (1) SA 1 (SCA) (2 September 2002)

In The Supreme
Court Of Appeal Of South Africa
Case
No 126/2001
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between
Phillipus
Petrus Nicolaas Coetzee Appellant
and
Attorneys’
Insurance Indemnity Fund Respondent
Before: Nienaber,
Marais, Schutz, Navsa and Mthiyane JJA
Heard:
21 May 2002
Delivered: 2
September 2002
Indemnity insurance –
limitation clause – interpretation – whether extends to
costs claim of claimant –
operation of s156 of Insolvency Act
where insured sequestrated.
_____________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
________________________________________________________________________
SCHUTZ
JA
[1] This
appeal is concerned with the operation of the limitation of liability
clause in an indemnity policy, in circumstances where
the estate of
the insured has been sequestrated, so that s156 of the Insolvency Act
24 of 1936 (the Act) functions. The section
confers a direct action
against an indemnifying insurer upon a third party who has a claim
against the insured.
[2] That third party is one Coetzee, who suffered
serious injuries when he slipped on a wet floor at the house of one
Schmidt in
Welkom. This led to a claim against Schmidt of about one
and a half million rands. Coetzee appointed an attorney, one Botha,
to bring action on his behalf. Acting negligently, Botha allowed
Coetzee’s claim to become prescribed. Coetzee then sued
Botha
for the sum abovementioned, together with costs. It is this action
that has led to the dispute which has come before us.
The claim for
the capital amount, together with the costs later incurred, far
exceeds the limit of one million rands contained
in Botha’s
indemnity policy with the respondent, the Attorneys Insurance
Indemnity Fund (the Fund). As will be explained
below, the Fund was
later substituted for Botha as the defendant (under s156 of the Act).
Coetzee, as plaintiff, accepts that
the capital amount of his claim
is limited to R1 m, but contends that his recoverable costs are not
subject to the limitation and
may be recovered from the Fund in
addition to the R1 m. The Fund, on the other hand, contends that its
total liability for capital
and costs is R1 m. That is the dispute.
[3] Before
the trial was heard, and on 9 January 1997, Botha’s estate was
finally sequestrated. Shortly before the trial
date, 2 September
1997, Coetzee’s representatives gave notice to amend the
particulars of claim by replacing Botha as defendant
with his trustee
in insolvency, one Wessels. This led to the need to seek
condonation. Hancke J, before whom the trial came,
then suggested
that there should be a substitution of defendants to cite, not
Wessels, but the Fund, this under s156 of the Act.
The parties
agreed. Accordingly on 3 September the Fund became the sole
defendant. The trustee in insolvency seems to have got
lost on the
way, as one would have expected that Coetzee would have claimed from
the Fund up to its indemnity limit and from the
trustee for any
balance. Merits and quantum having been separated, Hancke J in due
course decided in favour of Coetzee on the
merits. He also ordered
costs against the Fund. These costs were later taxed in an amount of
R49 619,13. That sum is by no means
the full measure of Coetzee’s
recoverable costs.
[4] Subsequently
quantum was agreed, save that the parties could not agree whether
costs were to be included in the R1 m limit,
so that their inclusion
would proportionally reduce the capital claim, or whether they were
recoverable additionally to the R1
m. This dispute came before
Lombard J. His decision, favourable to Coetzee, is reported as
Coetzee v Vrywaringsversekeringsfonds Vir Prokureurs
2000 (2)
SA 262
(O). It was reversed by Malherbe J with Wright J and Wessels
AJA concurring. Their decision is reported as
Vrywaringsversekeringsfonds Vir Prokureurs v Coetzee
2001 (4)
SA 1273
(O). It is the appeal against that decision which is now
before us, special leave having been granted by this Court. The
combined
sum of the agreed quantum and Coetzee’s recoverable
costs well exceeds one million rands.
[5] There
are two main issues to be decided. The first is whether in terms of
the indemnity policy Coetzee’s costs are included
in the limit.
The second is whether, even if they are, s156 operates in such a way
as to allow him to recover them in excess of
the limit, this because
the costs, or at least the post-sequestration costs, are recoverable
not from Coetzee, who is bound by
the terms of the policy, but from a
new defendant who has been introduced by statute and who is not so
bound.
The Interpretation of the
Policy
[6] The
decision of the first question depends upon the interpretation of the
policy. The limit is contained in clause 3.1, which
reads:

The liability of Insurers in respect of all
claims and claimants’ costs and expenses and Approved Costs
arising out of one
event or occurrence shall not exceed the Limit of
Indemnity specified in Schedule A.’
The Schedule A limit is R1 000 000-00.
[7] The indemnity is contained in clause 1, the
relevant part of which reads:
‘The
indemnity granted in this policy is in respect of:
1.1 the Insured’s legal liability to any third
party arising out of the Conduct of the profession by the Insured
which legal
liability is the subject of a claim first made on the
Insured during the Period of Insurance irrespective of when or where
such
liability arose.
1.2 Approved
Costs in connection with any claim under 1.1 …..’
[8] Approved costs are defined in clause 2.3 to
mean:
‘”
Approved
Costs” – all legal and similar costs and expenses which
the Insured may incur with Insurers written consent
which shall not
be unreasonably withheld.’
[9] ‘The Insured’ in terms of clause
2.4 of the policy is the attorney Botha. His costs are, in terms of
the definition
thereof and as limited by the said definition of
‘Approved Costs’, included in the indemnity by virtue of
clause 1.2.
The Fund’s written consent to the incurring of the
costs was given. The first of the elements making up the limit in
clause
3.1 is therefore identified. Botha’s costs are the
‘Approved Costs’.
[10] The remaining phrase in clause 3.1 needing
interpretation is ‘all claims and claimants’ costs and
expenses’.
The ‘claim’ in this case is plainly
Coetzee’s claim, at least for the capital amount thereof, as it
is a claim
of the kind indemnified against in clause 1.1.
[11] There remains the question, the one that has
to be decided, whether Coetzee’s costs are included in the
indemnity and
also the limit set out in clause 3.1. In my opinion
those costs are included in both. As far as the
indemnity
is
concerned those costs are part of Botha’s ‘legal
liability’, even if not yet incurred or quantified, as a

liability for costs potentially flows out of a liability in delict.
Whether or not the ‘claim’ when first made expressly

mentions costs, a claim for costs is implicitly included. Any
opposite conclusion would be thoroughly unbusinesslike.
Cf M Zahn
Investments (Pty) Ltd v General Accident Insurance of South Africa
Ltd
1981 (4) SA 143
(SECLD) at 148B-C. It would be astounding if
an attorney in Botha’s position were to be indemnified against
a damages claim
but not against a claim for costs inevitably
accompanying it. My conclusion is that Coetzee’s costs claim
is covered by
the indemnity.
[12] As regards the
limit
in clause 3.1,
these costs are plainly included in the words ‘and claimant’s
costs and expenses.’ The ‘claimant’
is not Botha,
who is referred to throughout as ‘the insured.’ The
‘claimant’ is the third party, in this
case Coetzee. So
his claim for costs is included in the limit. Again this is the
businesslike conclusion, as without such inclusion
the limit would be
holed and would not really be a limit at all. In this connection it
should be remembered that a limit and its
amount, plays a part in
fixing the premium.
[13] A further argument, also based on the terms
of the policy, is raised on behalf of Coetzee. It is based on
sub-clause 6.10.
Clause 6 is headed ‘Conditions’. The
sub-clause reads:

Insurers
may in their sole discretion, in the case of any claim for indemnity,
pay to the Insured or to any person claiming any
benefit under this
policy or to the claimant, the Limit of Indemnity (but deducting in
such case any sum or sums already paid as
indemnity) or any lesser
sum for which the claim or claims arising from such claim for
indemnity can be settled and Insurers shall
thereafter be under no
further liability in respect of such claims for indemnity,
except
for the payment of costs and expenses of litigation incurred prior to
the date of payment of such Limit of Indemnity or such
lesser sum

(emphasis supplied).
Mr Lowe, for Coetzee, contends that the
italicised words have the effect of increasing the indemnity limit by
the amount of costs
incurred prior to payment by the insurer in terms
of the sub-clause. In other words he says that here is a positive
enactment
increasing the limit elsewhere established.
[14] The Conditions part of the policy is hardly
the place where one would expect to find such a positive enactment,
as the function
of conditions is usually to cut down or qualify, in a
variety of ways, the insurer’s liability as defined in general
terms
in the indemnity section of the policy. In other words a
condition usually operates as a proviso does. The expression ‘except

for’ in clause 6.10 has much the same meaning as ‘provided
that’. In
S v Mhlanga and Others
[1995] ZACC 4
;
1995 (3) SA 867
(CC)
at 899A-C Kentridge AJ said of a proviso:

The
effect of a proviso is to except something from the preceding portion
of the enactment which, but for the proviso, would be
within it. It
cannot be construed as if it were an enacting clause.
R v Dibdin
[1910] P 57
at 125;
Mphosi v Central Board for Co-operative
Insurance Ltd
1974 (4) SA 634(A)
at 645.’
See also the judgment of Mahomed J at 883H.
[15] The purpose of clause 6.10 appears to me to
be to confer on the insurer the right to form the view that the
damages claim is
likely to succeed, and in consequence to pay out
(whether to the insured or directly to the claimant) an amount in
settlement up
to the limit of the indemnity, leaving the insured to
litigate at his option without further cover. The purpose of the
italicised
words is to ensure that when the insurer withdraws from
the fray he does not by so doing release himself from liability for
costs
already incurred.
[16] My conclusion that the words should be
interpreted in that way and not as a positive enactment is reinforced
by the absence
in clause 3.1 of words such as ‘Except as is
provided in clause 6.10’ or in clause 6.10 of words like
‘Notwithstanding
what is provided in clause 3.1’. As
things stand there is no indication of an intention to qualify clause
3.1 and there
is no conflict between the two sub-clauses. They serve
different purposes.
[17] Accordingly I am of the view that the
reliance on clause 6.10 is misplaced.
The Effect Of Section 156
[18] The second main question is whether the
substitution of the Fund in terms of s156 makes any difference:
Section 156 reads:

Insurer
obliged to pay third party’s claim against insolvent
Whenever
any person (hereinafter called the insurer) is obliged to indemnify
another person (hereinafter called the insured) in
respect of any
liability incurred by the insured towards a third party, the latter
shall, on the sequestration of the estate of
the insured, be entitled
to recover from the insurer the amount of the insured’s
liability towards the third party but not
exceeding the maximum
amount for which the insurer has bound himself to indemnify the
insured.’
[19] The purpose and operation of this section was
explained by Scott JA in
Le Roux v Standard General
Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
2000 (4) SA 1035
(SCA) at 1046J-1047G.
In the absence of such a section the insured’s creditor, upon
the former’s sequestration, would
have to prove a claim in his
insolvent estate and be content with whatever dividend is paid to the
concurrent creditors; whilst
the insured’s rights under the
policy would vest in his trustee, who would claim from the insurer
for the benefit of the
general body of creditors. The effect of the
section, therefore, is that the creditor is granted the considerable
advantage that
he does not have to share the proceeds of the policy
with other creditors. To that end he is given a direct right of
action against
the insurer.
[20] However, proceeded Scott JA, the section was
not designed to confer any additional favour upon that creditor. He
would have
to prove not only his claim against the insured, but also
that the insured would have succeeded against the insurer in his
claim
for an indemnity. In
Le Roux’s
case no notice of
a claim against the insured had been given to the insurer, as was
required by the policy. The plaintiff contended
that he had obtained
a vested right against the insurer upon the sequestration of the
insured’s estate and that this right
was not extinguished by
the insurer’s subsequent nullification of the policy, based on
the insured’s earlier failure
to give notice. This argument
was rejected, Scott JA saying (at 1047F-H):

Indien
die appellant se vertolking van die artikel korrek is, sou dit
beteken dat ‘n eiser onder die artikel ‘n beter
reg teen
die versekeraar verkry as wat die versekerde self geniet het. Dit
sou ook beteken dat die versekeraar verhoed word om
op sy
kontraktuele regte te steun indien dit blyk dat die versekerde
kontrakbreuk gepleeg het. So ‘n vertolking is onhoudbaar
en
kon nooit die bedoeling van die Wetgewer gewees het nie.’
[21] See also
Woodley v Guardian Assurance Co
of SA Ltd
1976 (1) SA 758
(W) at 759 E-H and
Canadian Superior
Oil Ltd v Concord Insurance Co Ltd (formerly INA Insurance Co Ltd)
1992 (4) SA 263
(W) at 273H-274B. In the latter part of this passage
van Schalkwyk J said:

What
the third party can recover, however, and whether the third party’s
claim is of such a kind as is covered by the indemnity
conferred upon
the insured, are matters which have to be determined by reference to
the contract of insurance. If the liability
is not of the kind
covered by the indemnity provided by the insurer, then, it stands to
reason, there will be no liability upon
the insurer to the third
party. So also, if the liability is of a kind for which the contract
of insurance makes provision subject
to a condition, the insurer will
only be obliged to pay if the condition has been fulfilled.’
[22] The argument for Coetzee cannot succeed. It
flies in the face of these passages, which are clearly consistent
with the terms
and purpose of the section. The argument is indeed
that in some circumstances a plaintiff has a better right than the
insured,
this because, so it is contended, costs are incurred in
enforcing a new statutory right granted against one who was formerly
a
stranger. This argument is contrary to the terms of the section,
which refers to ‘the maximum amount for which the insurer
has
bound himself to indemnify the insured’. This liability arises
out of the policy, including all its terms and conditions.
[23] Moreover, the consequence of the argument’s
succeeding would be that the insurer’s liability would be
increased.
I can see no basis for such a result in the section.
Indeed the contrary. The section is assiduous to assert that the
insurer’s
liability is limited to the amount stated in the
policy.
[24] A justification for reading the section so
as to allow the insured’s liability to be increased is said to
be this.
An unscrupulous or foolish insurer may allow litigation to
drag on and costs to be incurred until the limit of the policy is
reached,
then stop, leaving the insured with nothing. In other words
insurers would be encouraged to litigate not at their own, but at
their insureds’ expense. Though a possible scenario I do not
find it a likely one. An insurer who behaved in this way would
in
time find itself in trouble. Moreover, if such a case should arise
it would not arise because of s156 but because of the policy.
The
policy does indeed envisage that the costs of defending a claim
unsuccessfully will eat into the capital portion of the indemnity.
[25] The point was also made that at least to the
extent of the taxed costs of R49 619,13 mentioned in paragraph [3]
the limit should
be exceeded because, so it was argued, there was a
separate source of liability based on a court order between two
litigants.
There is no substance in this point. There is no issue
about the liability. The question is whether the amount must be
deducted
from the limit. As these costs are part of Coetzee’s
costs the answer to that question is yes.
[26] The appeal is dismissed with costs.
_____________
W P
SCHUTZ
JUDGE OF
APPEAL
CONCUR
NIENABER
JA
NAVSA JA
MTHIYANE
JA
MARAIS JA/
MARAIS JA:
[1] I have
had the benefit of reading the judgment of my brother Schutz. I am
unable to share his view that the appeal should fail.
I agree that
Coetzee had no greater rights against the Fund than Botha had under
the policy but, in my view, that has little,
if any, relevance to the
resolution of the issue which arises in this case.
[2] That issue is confined to the costs which were
ordered to be paid by the Fund as an unsuccessful litigant in an
action which
Coetzee was obliged to pursue because of the Fund’s
wrongful refusal to pay even the R1 million which it was liable to
pay
in terms of the policy. The Fund claims to be entitled to have
those costs included in the maximum amount of R1 million to which

Botha was entitled in terms of the policy.
[3] As
I see the position these costs are not costs with which the policy
deals. They are extraneous to it. The costs with which
the policy
deals are costs incurred by Botha in defending a claim made against
him and costs ordered to be paid by him in the event
of the claim
succeeding. Whatever the position may be regarding these costs and
the applicability of the limitation provision
to them as between
Botha and the Fund, once insolvency supervenes and the Fund is called
upon by Coetzee to pay by virtue of s
156, its position is no
different to that of any other litigant. If it is liable, it must
pay what the policy obliges it to pay.
If it considers it is not and
contests the entire claim but does so unsuccessfully, it will be
mulcted in costs.
[4] In
the present case the position is that no costs have been ordered to
be paid by Botha and any costs which may have been incurred
by Botha
prior to the Fund being substituted as the defendant are not in
issue. The costs which the Fund have been ordered to
pay are
Coetzee’s costs. Those costs were incurred by Coetzee because
the Fund, instead of accepting that Botha was liable
to Coetzee and
that by virtue of s 156 it was liable to Coetzee to the extent of the
limitation of liability in the policy, elected
to resist Coetzee’s
claim against it entirely, thus compelling him to seek relief from
the court. He succeeded in establishing
that the Fund was indeed
liable to him and, in conformity with the practice of the courts in
South Africa for more than a century,
the Fund was ordered to pay his
costs. They were not costs contractually recoverable by Botha under
the policy. They were neither
Botha’s own costs of defending
Coetzee’s claim nor were they costs awarded to Coetzee in an
action against Botha.
No question of indemnification under the
policy for any such costs arises. The limitation of liability in the
policy cannot and
does not apply to them. They stand outside the
policy.
[5] An
insurer faced with a claim under s 156 is in no better position than
anyone else faced with a claim. It is its right to
resist the claim
if it so chooses but it must take the ordinary consequences of having
to pay the costs of the ensuing lawsuit
if its resistance is not
well-founded. If it is well-founded the claimant will have to pay
its costs. There is no “free
ride” for either the third
party claimant who fails in establishing liability or the insurer who
fails in resisting liability.
In a s 156 situation the insurer is in
the fullest sense of the term
dominus litis
in so far as the
decision whether or not to resist the third party’s claim is
concerned.
1
The insured’s wishes are legally irrelevant to the insurer’s
undoubted right under s 156 to raise whatever defence
it thinks fit
against the third party’s claim. In my view, neither this
policy nor s 156 immunised the Fund from the potential
liability for
costs of the ensuing litigation. I think that this is so is shown by
a consideration of this hypothetical case.
[6] Coetzee
sues Botha and obtains judgment against him for R1 million and costs.
Botha is sequestrated before payment. Coetzee
then sues the Fund
for R1 million and these costs. The Fund resists the entire claim on
the ground that, as against Botha, it
was not liable under the
policy. It fails in that defence. Whether it is then ordered to pay
only R1 million or both R1 million
and the costs which were ordered
to be paid by Botha, the fact remains that, at best, Coetzee’s
claim was justified; at
worst, his claim was a
plus petitio
;
the Fund’s rejection of the entire claim was not justified, and
Coetzee had to resort to litigation to obtain what s 156
intended him
to have. To deprive Coetzee of the costs of establishing that the
Fund was indeed liable to him would undermine the
manifest purpose of
s 156 and diminish the sum which would have been payable to him had
the Fund accepted that it was liable and
paid him on demand. Whether
that sum should have been R1 million or R1 million plus the costs of
the action against Botha I need
not decide on the view I take of the
matter; whatever the sum it would have been diminished by the
refusal of the Fund to pay
what it should have paid when demand was
made. That cannot have been the intention of the legislature in
enacting s 156 and it
is the interpretation of that provision which
is ultimately relevant when considering questions of costs arising
from its invocation
by a third party.
[7] In
the hypothetical example posed, if the Fund had not disputed
liability entirely but had confined itself to resisting the
claim for
payment of the costs which Botha had been ordered to pay and
succeeded in its resistance, the result would of course
be different.
Coetzee would have gone to court to recover money to which he was
not entitled. He would obviously have to pay
the Fund’s costs.
[8] To
my mind, it matters not what the ground is upon which the Fund
chooses to resist Coetzee’s claim. If it relies upon
an
alleged failure by Botha to comply with a condition precedent to
liability set by the policy but fails in the defence it cannot
be
doubted that it would be liable for Coetzee’s costs of
establishing that it is indeed liable under the policy. If it
relies
upon an argument that the conduct of the insured of which Coetzee
complains is not conduct of a kind covered by the indemnity
provided
by the policy and the court holds that it is covered, it would be
equally liable to pay those costs. If it concedes that
conduct of
the kind complained of is covered by the policy but denies that such
conduct occurred and the court finds that it did
indeed occur, I can
see no reason why the result should be any different.
[9] To
take another hypothetical case: if Botha became obliged to sue the
Fund because it refused to indemnify him in the sum of
R1 million for
which he was liable to Coetzee and Botha succeeded with costs, it
could not be argued successfully that those costs
were part of
Botha’s liability to Coetzee arising out of the happening of
the event insured against and that they were therefore
included in
the R1 million limit. The liability to pay those costs arose out of
the unmeritorious resistance by the Fund of a
claim
under the
policy
. The effect of s 156 is to allow Coetzee to
exercise Botha’s rights against the Fund. If the Fund resists
payment it is
of no consequence whether the reason why it does so is
what it believes to be a lack of merit in Coetzee’s claim
against
Botha or the supposed existence of one or other contractual
defence available against Botha. In both instances the liability to

pay Coetzee’s costs is not attributable to any liability of
Botha arising from the happening of the event insured against.
It is
solely attributable to the Fund’s intransigence in refusing to
pay what it should have paid to Coetzee. In effect,
Coetzee is
enforcing Botha’s right to be indemnified under the policy.
Botha would have been entitled to his costs if he
had had to do so;
so should Coetzee be.
[10] I
would allow the appeal with costs. As this is a minority judgment
there is no point in my formulating the orders which should
have been
made in the Court
a quo
.
__________________
R M MARAIS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
1
CF
Nairn South East Lancashire Insurance Co
1930 SC 606
at
614, 615 and 617.