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[1985] ZASCA 7
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South African Eagle Insurance Co. Ltd. v Bavuma (429/83) [1985] ZASCA 7; [1985] 2 All SA 190 (A) (28 March 1985)
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32/85
Case no 429/83.
MC
SOUTH AFRICAN EAGLE INS. CO. LTD.
- and -LENNOX SIPHO BAVUMA
VIVIER AJA.
Case no 429/83 MC
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between
SOUTH AFRICAN EAGLE INSURANCE
COMPANY LIMITED. Appelant
- and -
LENNOX SIPHO BAVUMA Respondent
Coram: CORBETT, MILLER, NICHOLAS JJA
ELOFF, VIVIER AJJA.
Heard: 8 March 1985.
Delivered: 28 March 1985.
1.
VIVIER AJA :-
The respondent (as plaintiff) instituted an action
for damages in the South-Eastern Cape Local Division against
the appellant (as defendant) under the Compulsory Motor
Vehicle Insurance Act, No 56 of 1972. He alleged that on
27 February 1980, and in Willoby Crescent, Port Elizabeth,
he was injured when he was knocked down by a motor vehicle
insured by appellant under that Act, and negligently driven
at the time by
one Sergeant. For convenience I shall refer
to the parties as the plaintiff
and the defendant respectively.
In further particulars plaintiff stated that he
was
not a workman, nor was the collision an accident for
the purposes of the
Workmen's Compensation Act, No 30 of
1941. In its plea the defendant alleged inter alia that plain=
tiff was a workman, and the collision an accident in
terms /
2.
terms of Act 30 of 1941, and that, plaintiff having
failed to comply with the provisions of Act 30 of 1941,
his claim was
unenforceable against the defendant.
After the close of pleadings the parties prepared
a
special case for the adjudication of the Court in terms
of Rule 33(1) of the
Uniform Rules of Court. It was agreed
that plaintiff was a Black man and a
workman as defined
in Act 30 of 1941; that the collision was an accident
in
terms of that Act and that plaintiff had not lodged a
claim for
compensation nor had his employer furnished the
particulars referred to in
sec 8(5) of"that Act.
Three letters, written subsequently to the
defendant's
plea, were incorporated in the agreed statement of facts.
In the first letter the written consent of the Workmen's
Compensation / .
3.
Compensation Commissioner ("the Commissioner") was
requested to institute proceedings against the third
party insurers of the
vehicle involved in the accident.
The Commissioner granted his consent.
Thereafter, in
a second letter, the Commissioner confirmed that
his
consent in terms of sec 8(5) of Act 30 of 1941 had not
been granted
prior to the issue of summons but he stated
that he had no objection to the
proceedings continuing.
The last paragraph of the special case reads :-
"This Honourable Court is requested to determine only whether in the circumstances set out above there has been sufficient compliance with the provisions of Act No 30 of 1941 and whether plaintiff's claim is enforceable against the defendant."
The special case was heard by SOLOMON J, whose
judgment /
4.
judgment is reported: Bavuma v S A Eagle insurance Co
Ltd 1984(2) SA 786 (SECLD). In his judgment SOLOMON J
expressed the view that compliance with sec 8(5) of Act
30 of 1941 was not a condition precedent to the institution
of action
under Act 56 of 1972. He held, however, that
he was bound by the decision of
the Full Bench in Tyulu and
Others v Southern Insurance Association
Ltd 1974(3) SA 726
(BCD) at 731 D-F, that compliance with the requirements of
sec 8(5) is
part of a plaintiff's cause of action and that
the whole cause of action must
subsist when summons is issued.
He said that :-
" in the circumstances I am obliged to
hold that on the
plaintiff's summons, as
it now stands, there has not been compliance
with the provisions of Act No. 30 of 1941,
and that the plaintiff's claim is not enforceable
against /
5.
against the defendant."
He added, however, that in his view
".... even if the provisions of the Wc Compensation Act were not complied wit to the issue of summons, the matter ca rectified by an amendment of the summc
In the result, the learned judge made no order on
special case, but left
it to the plaintiff to apply
an amendment.
In due course the plaintiff applied for
amendment to the particulars of claim. He now a
that he was a Black
workman as defined in Act 30
that the collision was an accident in terms of
th
that his employer failed to furnish particulars o
6. of that Act, and
that, by virtue of the correspondence to which I have referred above, the
provisions of Act 30 of 1941 had been
duly complied with. The application for
the amendment was opposed by the defendant, but was granted by SOLOMON J, who
ordered the
plaintiff to pay the costs of the application. In granting the
amendment the learned judge held that he had a discretion to allow
the plaintiff
to introduce by amendment reference to subsequent events in order to complete
his cause of action. with the leave of
the Court a quo the defendant now
appeals to this Court against the granting of the amendment.
Sec 8(5), which
has since been amended by sec 3 of Act 29 of 1984, read as follows at the
relevant time :-
"(5) No /
7.
"(5) No proceedings in a court of law to recover damages against any person referred to in sub-section (1) may be taken by a workman without the written consent of the Commissioner unless he has lodge a claim for compensation, or unless in the case of a Bantu workman, his employer has furnished par= ticulars of the accident to the Commissioner in terms of sub-section (1) of section fifty-one."
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the amendment should not have been granted, compliance with sec 8(5) of Act 30 of 1941 was pa plaintiff's cause of action; that plaintiff's c of action had to subsist when summons was issued
8.
sequent events in order to complete his cause of action and that,since sec 8(5) of Act 30 of 1941 required the
prior written consent of the Commissioner, his subsequent written
consent could not constitute compliance with the sub-section.
These
contentions are not without substance. Nevertheless, the amendment was in my
view properly granted.
In para 10 of the Statement of Case, the
question of
law to be determined was too narrowly stated.
The Court should also have been
asked to determine whether
in the circumstances set out it was
necessary for the
plaintiff to comply with the provisions of sec 8(5)
of
Act No 30 of 1941. In considering that question, the
Court would, in
terms of sub-rule (3) of Rule 33 of the
Uniform Rules of Court, have been entitled to draw any inference of fact or of law from the facts and documents
as if proved at a trial. If it had done so, the Court
should /
9.
should, for the reasons hereinafter set out, have
determined that there was no necessity for the
plaintiff to comply with sec 8(5).
It is a well-established principle of our
law that a statutory provision enacted for the special
benefit of any
individual or body, may be waived by
that individual or body, provided that
no public interests
are involved. It makes no difference that the
provision
is couched in peremptory terms. This rule is expressed
by the maxim: quilibet potest renuntiare juri pro se
introducto - any one may renounce a law made for his
special benefit. See Ritch and Bhyat v Union Government 1912 AD 719 where INNES ACJ
said /
10.
said at p 734:
"The maxim of the Civil Law (C.2,3,29) that every man is able to renounce a conferred by law for his own benefit fully recognised by the law of Holland But it was subject to certain exceptions of which one was that no one could renounce a right contrary to law, or a right introduce not only for his own benefit but in the interests of the public as well. (Grot. , 3,24,6; n. 16; Schorer, n. 423; Schrasser l,c.l,n.3, etc.)."
See also Craies on Statute Law, 7th ed at p 269. This rule has frequently been applied by our Courts holding that statutory protection (often in the : limitation of actions) afforded local authorities
11.
but for the benefit of the local authority or Government department
itself. So, for example, it was held Steenkamp v Peri-Urban Areas Health
Committee 194 424 at 429, that the protection afforded by sec 1 Ord 17 of
1939, which provided that all actions a a local authority shall be
brought
within 6 month time when the cause of action arose, was not intended the benefit
of the public or the ratepayers but f protection
of the local authority itself,
and could fore be waived. See also: Durban Corporation 1942 NPD 24 at 41;
McDonald v Enslin 1960(2) SA at 317 A-C and Bay Loan Investment (Pty)
Ltd v
(Pty) Ltd 1971)(4) SA 538(C)at 540 A.
It/.....
12.
It is for the individual intended to be
benefited by the statutory provision in question, to
waive its
performance, and it is not open to another
person (not intended to be benefited) to insist that the
statutory provision be observed - Maxwell on the Interpre= tation
of Statutes, 12th ed at p 330, quoting the case of Hebblethwaite v
Hebblethwaite (1869) 39 LJP & M. 15.
Whatever the precise purpose of
sec 8(5) of Act 30 of 1941,'there can be no doubt that it was introduced solely
for the Commissioner's
benefit (Tyulu's case, supra
at 730 H). He is the only person who can grant consent for purposes of the sub-section, and the granting or refusal of his consent is a step taken in the interest of nobody else but himself. It is inconceivable that, had
the / ..
13. the sub-section been introduced for the sole benefit of the workman, as
was submitted by counsel for the appellant, the Legislature
could have
considered such strict requirements to be in the workman's interest.
In my
view no public interests are involved; the sub-section is not there for the
public benefit, nor does it concern any principle
of public policy. There is
nothing in the Act which either expressly or by necessary implication prohibits
the Commissioner from
waiving compliance with the sub-section. The provisions of
sec 8(5) are therefore capable of being waived by the Commissioner.
The next
question is whether the Commissioner, in the present case, waived compliance
with the provisions
of /
14.
of sec 8(5). On a proper construction of the Commis=
sioner's second letter, referred to above, I am satisfied
that he did so. The result is that, the Commissioner
having waived compliance with its provisions, sec 8(5)
cannot be relied upon as a bar to the proceedings. It
is true that in the paragraph added by the amendment the
plaintiff stated that :-
"in the premises there has been compliance with the provisions of the said Act for the purposes of pursuing plaintiff's action herein"
and did not aver that by reason of the Commissioner's
waiver of the said
provisions the plaintiff was excused
from compliance therewith but that is a
point which on the
form of the amendment, it was open to the plaintiff to
take /
15. take: the waiver clearly appears from the copy of the Commissioner's letter dated 28 February 1983, which is annexed, and the excuse from compliance follows from that as a matter of law.
It follows that, although the reasons differ from those of SOLOMON J, the amendment was correctly allowed.
In the result the appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the em= ployment of two counsel.
W. VIVIER AJA.
CORBETT JA.)
MILLER JA.)
NICHOLAS JA.) Concur.
ELOFF AJA.)