(ii) be sent by registered post or delivered by hand to the MMF, at its principal or branch or regional office, or to the appointed
agent who in terms of Article 13 must handle the claim, at his registered office or local branch office, and the MMF or such agent,
as the case may be, shall at the time of delivery by hand acknowledge receipt thereof and the date of such receipt in writing.
(e) If the MMF or an appointed agent, as the case may be, does not, within 60 days from the date on which a claim, as set out in paragraph
(a), was sent by registered post or delivered by hand to the MMF or the appointed agent, object to the validity thereof) the claim
shall be deemed to be valid in law in all respects."
Article 56 provided that prescription did not run against certain
persons. It has no application to this case.
Mutual and Federal's duty to handle claims in respect of accidents
8 which occurred on 1 May where the identity of the owner or driver had been
established, was fixed by regulation 2(1) and Schedules B and C thereto of the
applicable regulations made in terms of the Act (Government Notice R 754
published in Government Gazette 15639 of 22 April 1994.). The MMF, in
terms of regulation 2 (3), was obliged to deal with claims for which no
appointed agent had been designated. No appointed agent had been designated
to handle claims arising out of accidents that occurred on 30 April. Hence the
need for the appellant to serve the MMF 1 form on the respondent
It was argued on the appellant's behalf that service of the MMF 1 form on Mutual and Federal amounted to substantial compliance with
the provisions of the Agreement and the Regulations. It was submitted that as the aim of the legislation was to provide an injured
person with the widest possible protection, it could not have been the intention of the legislature to non-suit a person who had
made a bona fide error of one day.
The question of whether there has been substantial compliance in
9 relation to a claim for compensation has not infrequently arisen with regard to
the contents of the claim form. AA Mutual Insurance Association Limited v
Gcanga 1980 (1) SA 858 (A), which was relied upon by the appellant's counsel,
was such a case. It was held that the form was not vitiated where, as a result of
a bona fide error, the wrong date of the collision appeared on the form - 29
instead of 30 May 1994. In the present matter, however, the contents of the
form are not in issue. The question is whether the submission of the form to an
authorised agent which is not required to handle the claim has the effect of
extending the period of prescription. In my view the appellant cannot rely on
the principle of substantial compliance to excuse her failure to send the MMF
1 form to the entity which had to deal with it. It was a peremptory requirement
of the Agreement that the claim for compensation had to be sent to the
appropriate appointed insurer or the MMF, as the case may be, before the
commencement of legal proceedings. This is clear from the provisions of
Article 62(a) (see Nkisimane and Others v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1978 (2)
10 SA 430 (A) at 433 E-G and 435 A-H; Evins v Shield Insurance Co Ltd 1980 (2)
SA 814 (A) at 831 E and SA Eagle Insurance Co Ltd v Pretorius 1998 (2) SA
656 (A) at 663 A-B). It is true that the object of the legislation was to provide
the widest possible protection to injured persons but this does not entitle a court
to overlook the failure to follow a procedure that required exact compliance.
In the result the submission of the claim form to Mutual and Federal had no
legal effect.
The appellant's counsel also argued that Mutual and Federal was
the agent of MMF and that the submission of the claim form to the agent
therefore sufficed. He referred to the provisions of Article 13 which, he
submitted, made it clear that the MMF was the true defendant, that it was liable
to pay the appellant's claim and that the appointed agent merely administered
the claim on its behalf It is unnecessary in this appeal to consider the precise
relationship between the MMF and the appointed agents. It is clear that the
powers and duties of appointed agents contained in Article 13(b)(i) and (ii) were
11
to be exercised only by the particular agent which was authorised to deal with
the claim. Mutual and Federal had no authority to deal with a claim that arose out of an accident which occurred on 30 April. Nor
did it have the authority to receive the MMF 1 form on behalf of the respondent. Consequently the submission of the claim form to
Mutual and Federal did not have the effect of extending the period of prescription against the MMF.
It was also argued on behalf of the appellant that as Mutual and Federal did not object to the validity of the claim form within sixty
days of its receipt, it was deemed to be valid in law in terms of Article 62(e). It is clear that Article 62(e) applied only to the
appointed agent which was required to handle the claim. As Mutual and Federal was neither authorised nor obliged to deal with the
appellant's claim, its failure to object to the validity of the claim form within sixty days cannot clothe the form with legal efficacy.
In the circumstances the MMF 1 form which was served on Mutual and Federal did not have the effect of extending the period of prescription
of the
12 appellant's claim against the MMF to five years. The appellant's claim
accordingly became prescribed upon the expiry of three years from the date of
the accident. The appeal is therefore dismissed with costs.
LS MELUNSKY AJA
VAN HEERDEN DCJ) NIENABER JA) HARMS JA) CONCUR SCOTT JA)
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