Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 278South Africa
Van Der Merwe v Bosch N.O and Others (39756/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 278 (19 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Der Merwe v Bosch N.O and Others (39756/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 278 (19 March 2025)
Van Der Merwe v Bosch N.O and Others (39756/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 278 (19 March 2025)
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sino date 19 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No. 39756 / 2016
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE
19 March 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter
between:
TERESA VAN DER
MERWE
PLAINTIFF
and
LEON BOSCH
N.O.
FIRST DEFENDANT
BRIAN DONALD BENNETT
N.O.
SECOND DEFENDANT
GERT JOHANNES DU
PLESSIS N.O.
THIRD DEFENDANT
JOHANNES GERHARDUS VAN
DER
MERWE
N.O.
FOURTH DEFENDANT
LANĖ VAN DER
MERWE N.O.
FIFTH DEFENDANT
CA VAN DER MERWE
SIXTH DEFENDANT
R VAN DER
KOLFF
SEVENTH DEFENDANT
LJJ BASSON
EIGHTH DEFENDANT
G JORDAAN
NINTH DEFENDANT
JG VAN DER
MERWE
TENTH DEFENDANT
LANĖ VAN DER
MERWE
ELEVENTH DEFENDANT
STABILITAS BOARD OF
EXECUTORS (PTY)
TWELFTH DEFENDANT
LTD N.O.
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
THIRTEENTH DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER, J
[1]
The
central issues in the main action revolve around the validity of two
Wills of the deceased
[1]
dated November 2013 and March 2014. Whilst one would ordinarily
assume that the latter would be the valid one as it is the most
recent, the issue at hand is that it is only a copy - the
original could not be located. Thus the defendants aver that the
2013
Will is the only valid last Will of the deceased.
[2]
The
plaintiff
[2]
contends that the March 2014 Will is valid. It appears that the
contentious issue is that in the November 2013 Will the deceased's
primary residence is bequeathed to the Dolf Van Der Merwe Familie
Trust (the Trust), whilst in the March 2014 Will, it is bequeathed
to
the plaintiff.
[3]
In
May 2016, the plaintiff launched the main application in which she
sought inter alia relief that would see the copy of the March
2014
Will being declared valid. The application was opposed by inter alia
the trustees of the Trust
[3]
.
[4]
On 14 October 2019 the parties, agreed to
refer the matter to trial:
a)
the notice of motion would stand as a
simple summons;
b)
the plaintiff would file a declaration
within 20 days;
c)
the Uniform Rules would then regulate the
further proceedings and filing of pleadings.
[5]
This was done and a 10 day trial date was
allocated by the DJP for 6 to 17 March 2023.
[6]
On 25 January 2023 the defendants served a
substantial amendment in terms of Rule 28(1) - this was approximately
7 weeks before trial. Naturally, the trial could
not proceed and was postponed and the defendants were ordered to pay
those wasted
costs.
[7]
The plaintiff objected to the proposed
amendment.
[8]
The application for leave to amend was
served on 23 February 2023 and it is this that stands to be
adjudicated.
The Rule 28
[9]
The amendment seeks to introduce an alleged
settlement agreement concluded between the parties as follows:
“
15.8.1
the plaintiff accepted and acknowledged the validity of the November
2013 Will (in preference to
the copy of the March 2014 Will) as being
the last Will and Testament of the deceased.
15.8.2
the plaintiff undertook and/or agreed that she would not challenge or
dispute the validity
of the November 2013 Will;
15.8.3
the plaintiff and the defendant would honor the deceased's wishes as
expressed in paragraph
one of the deceased note / memo (…) and
in doing so:
15.8.3.1 the
plaintiff would be permitted to (continue to) occupy the residential
property... for a maximum period of one
calendar year from November
2014;
15.8.3.2 the plaintiff
would be free of obligation to pay rent, rates and taxes, home owners
association levies, and any accompanying
consumption or utility
charge pertaining to the residential property and/or her aforesaid
occupation thereof;
and
15.8.3.3 the
plaintiff was permitted, until the end of January 2015, to (continue
to) possess and use a VW Amorok vehicle
free of charge.”
[10]
The defendants then plead that the Trust
has complied with the terms of the above settlement agreement and:
“
15.11
In the circumstances, and as a consequence of that alleged above, the
plaintiff undertook and/or
agreed that she would not:
15.11.1
contest and/or challenge the validity of the November 2013 will;
15.11.2 seek
the relief that she does in these proceedings,
and, in so doing:
15.11.3 the
dispute between the parties pertaining to the validity of the
November 2013 was settled; and/or
15.11.4 the
plaintiff waived, abandoned, forfeited, novated and/or compromised
her right(s) to contest the validity of the
November 2013 will as
being the last will and testament of the deceased.”
[11]
It is to this that the plaintiff
filed following objection:
“
1.
The intended amendment renders the Defendants’ plea excipiable
for the following reasons:
1.1
the Defendants’ plead in paragraph
15.5 that on or about 11 December 2014 and at or near Vanderbijlpark
alternatively Vereeniging
the plaintiff and the Dolf Van Der Merwe
Trust (“the Trust”) concluded an oral, alternatively a
partly oral, partly
written and/or partly tacit agreement (“the
Settlement Agreement”);
1.2
A Trust is not a legal persona and cannot
enter into an agreement or be represented by an agent. Trustees
acting jointly, or a person
duly authorised by each of the trustees
to act on each trustees behalf, can jointly enter into an agreement.
It is not alleged
that the trustees jointly were parties to the
agreement.
1.3
As a result thereof the proposed amendment
fails to establish the conclusion of a valid agreement and fails to
disclose a defence,
and the alleged Settlement Agreement relied upon
in paragraph 15.5 is void
ab initio;
1.4
The intended amendment relied upon in terms
of paragraphs 15.5 to 15.11 does not sustain a defence and is bad in
law for the following
reasons:
1.4.1.
The alleged Settlement Agreement pleaded is
contra bonos mores
as
it violates the deceased's common law right to freedom of testation,
thereby rendering the Settlement Agreement void and unenforceable;
1.4.2
The alleged Settlement Agreement pleaded is
contra bonos mores
as it violates the deceased's Constitutional Right not to be deprived
of property in terms of Section 25(1), thereby rendering
the
Settlement Agreement void and unenforceable;
1.4.3
The alleged Settlement Agreement pleaded is
contra bonos mores,
as the Plaintiff and the Defendants’ are not authorised to
compromise and/or agree as to which Will represented the deceased’s
last Will and Testament and/or which Will the Master should accept,
thereby rendering the Settlement Agreement void and unenforceable.
2.
The Defendants’ notice of intention to amend its plea, was
brought at a late stage and shortly
before the trial date, without
any adequate explanation therefore and the Plaintiff is as a result
thereof, prejudiced in her preparation
for an in conducting the
trial.”
[12]
It is, by now, settled law that:
a)
a
court hearing and application in terms of rule 28 has a wide
discretion which should be exercised judicially
[4]
;
b)
“
[T]he
practical rule adopted seems to be that amendments will always be
allowed unless the application to amend is mala fide or
unless such
amendment would cause an injustice to the other side which cannot be
compensated by costs, or in other words unless
the parties cannot be
put back for the purposes of justice in the same position as they
were when the pleading which it is sought
to amend was filed.”
[5]
;
c)
amendments
will always be allowed unless the amendment is mala fide or unless it
will cause an injustice that cannot be cured by
a cost order
[6]
;
d)
there must be an explanation for the
amendment and a triable issue;
e)
the
amendment must facilitate the proper ventilation of the dispute
between the parties
[7]
;
f)
an
amendment should not be refused simply to punish the applicant for
neglect - this is because the order to pay the wasted costs
occasioned by the amendment is the punishment.
[8]
[13]
The
Court in
Zarug
v Parvathie NO
[9]
set out certain relevant principles including:
“
1.
That the Court will allow an amendment, even though it may be a
drastic one, if it raises no new question that
the other party should
not be prepared to meet.
2.
With its large powers of allowing amendments, the court will always
allow a defendant, even up to the
last moment, to raise a defence,
such as prescription, which might bar the action.
3.
No matter how negligent or careless the mistake or omission may have
been and no matter how late the
application for amendment may be
made, the application can be granted if the necessity for the
amendment has arisen through some
reasonable cause, even though it be
only a bona fide mistake.”
[10]
[14]
And it is in this light that plaintiff’s
last objection must be viewed. The objection is that the Rule
28 came at an
extremely late stage in the proceedings - some four
years after proceedings commenced. The plaintiff alleges that she has
been
prejudiced by this late introduction of the new issue and that
the explanation, for the late introduction of this issue, is simply
without substance.
[15]
The defendants state that they only
realised when they were preparing for trial that the issue of the
Settlement had not been pleaded;
that there is no prejudice to the
plaintiff as it had been fully canvassed in the affidavits in the
initial motion proceedings;
that as the trial was postponed, the
plaintiff has sufficient time to prepare; that this issue may well be
dispositive of the entire
action and that any prejudice possibly
suffered by the plaintiff was cured by the costs order granted in her
favour when the trial
was postponed in 2023.
[16]
I agree with all these submissions and I
find that the lateness of the Rule 28 is not a ground to refuse the
amendment in circumstances
where there is no new trial date, where
the issue has already been canvassed in the affidavits and where the
plaintiff will be
given adequate time to plead to the amendment,
consult and prepare for trial.
[17]
As to the other grounds of objection: they
must also be dismissed:
a)
firstly, the objection is that the
defendants seek to bypass the provisions of the
Wills Act 7 of 1953
and usurp the function of the court in determining which of the 2013
or 2014 Wills is the last Will and Testament of the deceased.
The
argument is that it is not legally competent for the parties to enter
into a settlement agreement and/or compromise to determine
which of
the Wills represents the deceased’s last Will and Testament;
b)
secondly, the plaintiff argues that the
Settlement is contrary to a testator’s common law and statutory
right to freedom of
testation and his constitutional right to dispose
of his property in the manner he deemed fit. The argument is that
third parties
cannot override the testator’s choice and intent,
especially not by agreement;
c)
plaintiff argues that the Settlement is
contra bonis mores
as it violates the deceased’s common law right to freedom of
testation thereby rendering the settlement void and unenforceable;
d)
thus the plaintiff argues that the
amendment fails to establish a defence and is excipiable.
[18]
I disagree:
a)
firstly, an agreement concluded after the
death of the deceased cannot be said to limit his freedom of
testation which was exercised
unhindered prior to his death;
b)
secondly, the plaintiff fails to specify
the provision in the
Wills Act upon
which she relies for the argument
set out in paragraph 17(a) - all she does is make generalised
assertions and skirt the issue.
The same lack of specificity applies
to her argument regarding the alleged common law limitations;
c)
thirdly, parties are free to either accept
or reject a donation or bequest made by a testator. The beneficiaries
are also free to
enter into an agreement to alter the distribution of
an estate. This would achieve the very objective that the plaintiff
argues
is not legally competent in terms of the
Wills Act or
a
testator’s common law right to freedom of testation or his
constitutional right to dispose of his property in the manner
he
deems fit - it would distribute the state in a manner not provided
for in the Will.
[19]
The fact that such a distribution agreement
is permissible (which was conceded in argument) simply demonstrates
the fallibility
of the plaintiff’s argument.
[20]
In any event, at least prima facie, the
Settlement simply appears to give effect to the provisions of the
March 2013 Will albeit
within certain timelines- I see no contentious
issue arising from this. And I find no contentious issuing arising
from the fact
that (if proven) the Settlement provides that the
plaintiff then accepts the validity of the March 2013 Will.
[21]
Such an agreement is certainly not
contra
bonis mores
where:
a)
the plaintiff must discharge the onus in
this regard and
b)
the
court must consider the facts, circumstances and history of the
matter.
[11]
[22]
Thus, in my view, no valid grounds of
objection exist and the defendants must be granted leave to amend.
Costs
[23]
As stated supra, a court will grant an
amendment if any possible prejudice can be cured by a costs order.
[24]
The plaintiff seeks costs, including cost
of senior counsel taxable on scale B. The defendants argue that they
have already been
“punished” because of the late
Rule 28
when the trial was postponed at their cost. They argue that the
objection is in any event untenable and that the plaintiff should
consequently pay the costs of the
Rule 28
, including costs of two
counsel, on scale C.
[25]
In my view, the objection to the
Rule 28
is
indeed without any merit. This being so, the plaintiff is not
entitled to the usual order of costs. Had there been at least
an
arguable case made out by her, perhaps costs could have been ordered
in the cause - but there is none.
[26]
But I am not of the view that the issues
presented before me were so weighty or complex that the employment of
two counsel was justified,
or that costs on Scale C are warranted. I
am of the view that costs consequent upon the employment of a senior
counsel is warranted:
after all, the plaintiff also had senior
counsel appearing on her behalf.
ORDER
1.
The applicants (defendants in the action)
are granted leave to amend their plea in the action, as set out in
annexure GP1 to the
application.
2.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs
of the
Rule 28
application, including the cost of senior counsel
which costs are to be taxed in accordance with Scale
B.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judge whose name is reflected, and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 19 March 2025.
For
the 1
st
to 5
th
, 10
th
and
11
th
applicants
:
Adv G
Amm SC
Instructed
by
:
Cox
Yeats Attorneys
For
the respondent
:
Adv J
Vorster SC
Instructed
by
:
Tobias
Bron Inc Attorneys
Matter
heard on
:
12
March 2025
Judgment
date
:
19
March 2025
[1]
Mr Rudolf Marthinus van der Merwe
[2]
Who
is the respondent in the
Rule 28
application
[3]
The
main application and action are opposed by the 1
st
to 5
th,
10
th
and 11
th
defendants who are the applicants in the present
Rule 28
application
[4]
Embling v Two Oceans Aquarium CC
2000 (3) SA 691
(C) at 694 G-H
[5]
Moolman v Estate Moolman
1927 CPD 27
at 29
[6]
Commercial
Union Assurance Co Ltd v Waymark NO
1995 (2) SA 73
(Tk) at 76 D-I
[7]
Waymark
supra
[8]
GMF Kontrakteurs (Edms) Bpk v Pretoria City Council
1978 (2) SA 219
(T) at 223 B
[9]
1962 (3) SA 872
(D) at 876 A-D
[10]
Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and
Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC) paragraph 9
[11]
“Courts have been reluctant to decide exceptions in regards of
fact bound issues”: Herb (Pty) Ltd and Others v Matthews
and
Others (2020/15069) [2021] ZAGPJHC 693 (16 November 2021) paragraph
11
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