Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 84South Africa
Machipi and Another v Palabora Mining Company Board of Trustees of Palabora and Others (2023-062156) [2025] ZAGPPHC 84 (6 February 2025)
Headnotes
by the Fund, not the deceased. According to the policy terms, the death benefits are payable per the Fund rules in accordance with the PFA. The policy terms preclude Sanlam from effecting payment only to the applicants, given the trustees’ determination of the death benefits’ allocation.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Machipi and Another v Palabora Mining Company Board of Trustees of Palabora and Others (2023-062156) [2025] ZAGPPHC 84 (6 February 2025)
Machipi and Another v Palabora Mining Company Board of Trustees of Palabora and Others (2023-062156) [2025] ZAGPPHC 84 (6 February 2025)
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sino date 6 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 2023-062156
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
6 FEBRUARY 2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
CHAISA
MACHIPI
First
Applicant
CALIPHONIA
MACHIPI
Second
Applicant
and
PALABORA
MINING COMPANY
BOARD
OF TRUSTEES OF PALABORA
First
Respondent
MINING
COMPANY
Second
Respondent
SANLAM
LIFE INSURANCE LTD
Third Respondent
The
matter was heard in open court. The judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives
by email. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 6
February 2025.
JUDGMENT
Mazibuko
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicants seek an order declaring that
the nomination
member beneficiary
form
(‘the form’), nominating them as beneficiaries to a life
insurance policy signed by the late Lunga Kopolo (‘the
deceased’) is an instruction to the respondents to make payment
of the death benefits to them, and that the first and second
respondents have no jurisdiction to deciding on payout of the
deceased’s life insurance policy administered by Sanlam.
Further,
the third respondent is to pay the applicants in their
capacities as nominated beneficiaries of the benefits accrued due to
the
passing of the deceased in terms of the life insurance policy.
[2]
The second and third respondents oppose the application on the basis
that the death benefits ought
to be paid in terms of section 37C of
the Pension Fund Act
[1]
(‘the
PFA’). The first respondent files no opposing papers.
Parties
[3]
The first applicant is a grandmother to the deceased, the late
employee of the first respondent
(‘Palabora’). She is a
nominated beneficiary of 40% of all the benefits, including those
from the Group Life Insurance
Policy (GLIP) as a result of the demise
of the deceased.
[4]
The second applicant is the deceased’s aunt, the sister to his
late father, and a nominated
beneficiary of 60% of all the benefits,
including those from the GLI, due to the deceased's demise.
[5]
The first respondent is Palabora Copper (Pty) Limited (‘Palabora’),
incorrectly cited
as Palabora Mining Company, a company with limited
liabilities, incorporated in terms of the Companies Act with its
registered
office at 1Copper road, Palaborwa.
[6]
The second respondent is Palabora Pension Fund (‘the Fund’),
incorrectly cited as
the Board of Trustees of Palabora Mining
Company. The Fund is a juristic entity registered and regulated under
the PFA. It is a
policyholder/owner.
[7]
The third respondent is Sanlam Life Insurance Limited (‘Sanlam’),
an insurer. The
Fund entered into an insurance policy contract to
provide risk benefits.
Brief
background
[8]
The Fund procured a group scheme policy
from Sanlam for Palabora’s employees who are members of the
Fund. Under the policy,
the benefits of the deceased’s
membership of the Fund included death benefits, payable in terms of
the Fund rules in accordance
with the PFA in the event of his death.
[9]
At the time of his demise, on 18 May 2022, the
deceased was employed by Palabora from 1 October 2021.
As an
employee, he was a member of the fund. On 6 October 2021, he
completed a form nominating his grandmother and aunt as beneficiaries
of 40% and 60% of all his benefits, including the death benefit.
[10]
The Fund trustees allocated the deceased’s death benefits at 5%
and 15% to the first and second applicant
respectively and 80% to the
deceased’s minor, born a few months after the form was signed.
Assertions
[11]
The applicants contest the trustees’ allocation, contending
that the nominated beneficiaries must be
paid in terms of the
nomination form. Further, the life insurance policy does not form
part of the fund. Consequently, the
PFA, specifically section
37C, does not apply, but the Long Term Insurance Act
[2]
(‘the LTI’) does.
[12]
The Fund opposes the application on the grounds that the contract
governing the death benefits is between
Sanlam and itself, and
extending the same to include the applicants is impermissible.
[13]
Sanlam opposes the application on the basis that the policy is a
group scheme policy held by the Fund, not
the deceased. According to
the policy terms, the death benefits are payable per the Fund rules
in accordance with the PFA. The
policy terms preclude Sanlam from
effecting payment only to the applicants, given the trustees’
determination of the death
benefits’ allocation.
Issue
[14]
The court is to determine whether the group life insurance scheme
falls under the ambit of the PFA.
Discussion
[15]
The rules governing the Fund, as per the extract provided by Sanlam
state:
10.1.1 ‘On the
death of a MEMBER whilst in the service of an EMPLOYER, there shall
be payable to the MEMBER’S DEPENDANTS
and/or NOMINEES in such
proportions as determined by the TRUSTEES in terms of Section 37C of
the ACT, a pension purchased from
an INSURER of such amount as can be
purchased by:
(a)
subject to the provisions of RULE 4.7, such multiple of the MEMBER’S
PENSIONABLE SALARY as can
be secured by the EMPLOYER’S
contribution to the FUND in terms of RULE 8.2.2(a) or RULE 8.2.3, as
applicable; plus
(b)
the MEMBER’S FUND CREDIT at the date
of death.’
(
sic
).
[16] It
is not disputed that Sanlam administers all the employees’
insurance policy-related matters of Palabora,
including the GLIP.
Notably, the nomination form bears the Sanlam emblem and the words
‘Administered by Sanlam. ’ It
is not in dispute that the
nomination form applied to the benefits accruing from the Fund and
GLIP as administered by Sanlam.
[17] In
terms of the PFA, the fund’s task in allocating a death benefit
in terms of section 37C of the Act
is to identify all the potential
beneficiaries (see Van Schalkwyk v Mine Employees’ Pension Fund
and Another [2003] BPLR
5087 (PFA) at paragraph 15). The board of the
fund is vested with discretionary powers to decide on an equitable
distribution of
the death benefit. It is only in cases where it has
exercised its powers unreasonably and improperly or unduly fettered
the exercise
thereof, that its decision can be reviewed (see Mongale
v Metropolitan Retirement Annuity Fund [2010] 2 BPLR 192 (PFA)).
[18]
The PFA is applicable to many other types of pension funds but not to
group life insurance. In the matter
of Pieters v Shrosbree No &
Others V Love & Others
[2006] 3 All SA 343
(SCA), the Supreme
Court of Appeal held that in the ordinary course, the proceeds of an
insurance policy will go directly to a
nominated beneficiary. It does
not form part of the deceased’s estate like other proceeds.
[19] In
the matter of Xaba and Others v Xaba NO and Others,
[3]
the court, faced with a similar set of facts, like this court, held:
‘
The
Fund and Sanlam policy are two separate entities and that the
benefits payable from the Fund are to be distinguished from the
benefits payable under the policy. It further found that the benefits
payable in terms of the Pension Fund are regulated by the
Pension
Fund Act and the benefits payable in terms of the Group Life
Insurance policy are determined by the conditions of applicable
law.’
[20]
The applicants, in their capacity as nominated beneficiaries to both
the Fund and policy, seek an order that
Sanlam make a specific
payment to them flowing from the GLIP due to the death of the
deceased. The second and third respondents
argue that the Fund rules
govern all the death benefits; therefore, the trustees, as empowered
by section 37C, must allocate the
benefits. In my respectful view,
their submission is misplaced when regard is had to the relief
sought, Xaba and Pieters
supra
.
[21] I
have no grounds to disagree with the applicants, as the benefits
payable in
The
PFA does not determine the terms of the GLIP. Therefore, the issue of
determination and allocation of benefits is not in the
purview of the
Fund trustees like other benefits, though they can be referred to as
death benefits or are administered by the same
insurer.
It
is uncontested that the death benefits are from the Fund and the
GLIP. This, therefore, requires to be administered differently
as
they, respectively, have unique consequences.
[22]
I find that section 37C of the PFA does not find application with
regard to the relief sought, even though
the same insurer, Sanlam,
administers all the benefits relating to the employees. I, therefore,
find that the Fund trustees have
no jurisdiction and if they elect to
allocate the benefits, they will be acting
ultra
vires
, especially, contrary to the
nomination form. Accordingly, the application ought to succeed.
[23]
Regarding the costs, I find no reason why the applicants, as
successful parties, cannot be awarded the costs.
As a result, the
respondents are to bear the costs.
[24]
In the circumstances,
the following order is
made;
Order:
1.
The application is granted.
2.
The third respondent must pay the Group
Life Insurance Fund benefits within 30 days in accordance with the
member beneficiary nomination
form signed by the deceased.
3.
The second and third respondents are
jointly and severally liable for the costs, including the costs of
two counsel at scale B,
with one paying the other to be absolved.
N
G M MAZIBUKO
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
6 November
2024
Judgment
delivered on:
6 February
2025
APPEARANCES
:
For the applicant:
Adv T J Masutha
with
Adv A Sefupa
Attorneys for the
applicant:
Ramkolo Attorneys
For the second
respondent:
Adv K Megan
Attorney for the
Respondent:
Jonathan Mort Inc
For the third
respondent:
Adv T Sarkas
Attorney for the
Respondent:
Werksmans Attorneys
[1]
Act 24 of 1956.
[2]
Act
52 of 1998 as amended.
[3]
(A279/2013)
[2014] ZAGPPHC 812 (15 October 2014).
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