• Emmanuel Chola Mwaba sued Standard Bank Insurance Brokers and Liberty Group for an urgent payout to cover school fees, but the court found his policy was debt protection and not savings.
  • Judge JJ Wentzel-Thompson said there was “no authority in law” to order an advance payment and that financial hardship could not create rights outside the contract.
  • Judgment warns families that risk insurance protects loans only and cannot be used to pay everyday expenses like children’s education.

The High Court in Johannesburg has ruled that a personal loan protection policy cannot be treated like a savings account after a Johannesburg father tried to force his insurers to release money to pay his children’s school fees.

The case was a direct fight between Emmanuel Chola Mwaba, who represented himself, and two financial services companies, Standard Bank Insurance Brokers, which sold and administered his policy, and Liberty Group, the insurer linked to the cover.

Mwaba approached the urgent court seeking what he called an advance of benefits under his policy. He wanted the companies to pay money immediately so that outstanding school fees could be settled and his children allowed back into class.

Judge JJ Wentzel-Thompson said the problem with the application was basic and fatal from the start. “The basis for the application and the urgency arose from a fundamental misunderstanding by the applicant of the nature of the Personal Loan Protection Policy,” the judge wrote. It “was not, as he had imagined, a wealth policy.”

A private dispute between a parent and his insurers

Unlike cases involving regulators or government departments, this was a straightforward civil dispute. Mwaba was simply a policyholder. Standard Bank Insurance Brokers acted as the intermediary that concluded and managed the policy. Liberty Group stood behind the risk as insurer. His claim was that these two companies should now pay out cash to solve his financial crisis.

But the court stressed that their obligations were limited strictly to what the contract provided.

What the policy actually promised

The judge explained that the product was never meant to build up money for the policyholder. “The policy was not a wealth policy or ‘nest egg,” Judge Wentzel Thompson said. Instead, it provided for payment of amounts owing to the bank in the event of death, permanent disability, or certain serious illnesses.

In other words, it protected the bank’s loan, not the family’s day-to-day expenses. There was no savings component, no investment value, and no pot of money waiting to be withdrawn. That meant there was simply nothing available to advance.

No legal basis for emergency payment

Facing unpaid fees and possible exclusion from school, Mwaba argued that the situation was urgent and justified immediate relief. The court disagreed, saying urgency cannot create rights that do not exist in law.

“With little prospects of success in the main action, there is no authority in law that I am aware of that would permit the applicant the advance payment sought to pay the outstanding school fees,” the judge said.

The judgment also recorded that there was “no causal connection between the respondent and the applicant’s inability to pay his school fees,” meaning the insurers were not responsible for the debt that had built up.

Settlement closed the door

The court further noted that Mwaba had previously settled with the companies, who paid him about R69 000 in refunded premiums in what was recorded as a full and final settlement of all claims. He later tried to revive the dispute, arguing that the payment had been slightly late.

Judge Wentzel Thompson found the delay “was not material and did not entitle the applicant to rescind from the settlement agreement.” With the settlement standing, there was no live claim to support any further payment.

The application was dismissed with costs.

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