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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2025] ZAGPPHC 332
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## A.M v H.M and Others (A127/2024; 42362/2021)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 332 (27 March 2025)
A.M v H.M and Others (A127/2024; 42362/2021)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 332 (27 March 2025)
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sino date 27 March 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEAL
CASE NO: A127/2024
GP
CASE NO: 42362/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
In
the Full Court Appeal of:
A[...]
M[...]
Appellant
(Plaintiff
in the Court
a quo
)
and
H[...]
M[...]
First
Respondent
(First
Defendant / Excipient in the Court
a
quo)
H[...]
M[...] N.O.
(In
his capacity as Trustee of the
A[...]
Trust: IT
8998/07)
Second Respondent
(Second
Defendant / Excipient in the Court
a quo
)
A[...]
M[...] N.O.
(In
her capacity as Trustee of the
A[...]
Trust:
IT8998/07)
Third Respondent
(Third
Defendant in the Court
a quo
)
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Fourth
Respondent
(Fourth Defendant in the Court
a
quo
)
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT: PRETORIA
Fifth Respondent
(Fifth Defendant in the Court
a
quo
)
FULL
COURT JUDGMENT
THE
COURT:
[1]
This appeal serves before the Full Court with leave having been
granted by the Court
a quo
on 9 April 2024.
[2]
The appeal is against the whole of the judgment and order delivered
by Acting Justice Bokako under case number GP Number
42362/2021 on 31
August 2023. The Court
a quo
upheld paragraphs 1 to 6 of an
exception raised against the appellant’s particulars of claim
in the Court
a quo
.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[3]
The appellant and the first respondent were married and in the course
of the marriage a Family Trust, the A[...] Trust
with Trust No.
IT8998/07 was established on 12 July 2007. The appellant, the
first respondent and the late Jan Andreas Rautenbach
were duly
authorised to act as the trustees of the A[...] Trust in terms of
Section 6 of the Trust Property Control Act, No.57
of 1988.
[4]
The marriage faltered and the appellant and the first respondent
entered into a settlement agreement in respect of their
anticipated
divorce on 18 December 2015. The appellant and the first respondent
were divorced in 2016 under case number 1258/2016
in this Division
and the settlement agreement was made an order of court.
[5]
Mr Jan Andreas Rautenbach, the third trustee, passed away on 5 April
2018.
[6]
On 24 August 2021 the appellant sued the first to fifth respondents
setting out claims for maintenance, contempt of court,
specific
performance of the settlement agreement and and alternatives thereto
including a claim for damages.
[7]
On 6 December 2021 the first and second defendant filed a notice of
exception to the last two claims, which exception
was upheld by the
Court
a quo
on 31 August 2023.
[8]
The causes of complaint raised by the first and second defendants in
the exception only relate to the plaintiff’s
third claim, the
alternatives to the plaintiff’s third claim and the plaintiff’s
fourth claim.
[9]
The first and second defendants in the Court
a quo
excepted to
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim on the basis that the
particulars of claim disclose no cause of action against
the first
and second defendants. The exception was not based on vagueness and
embarrassment.
[10]
In light of the aforesaid it is not necessary to set out the claims
in the particulars of claim related to the first
claim (maintenance)
and the second claim (contempt).
[11]
The A[...] Trust is the registered owner of two immovable properties,
namely:
11.1 […] R[…]
Street, S[…] 1[…], M[…], Gauteng (“the
M[…] property”);
and
11.2 Unit 8[…],
Scheme S[…] Number 2[…] with Title Deed No. S[…],
located at 1[…]
S[…], Z[…] E[…], KZN
(“the Z[…] property”).
[12]
In terms of the settlement agreement these properties were to be
transferred to the plaintiff. However, this had not
taken place,
giving rise to the third claim in the particulars of claim.
[13]
In the particulars of claim it was pleaded regarding the Trust:
13.1 That it is the
registered owner of the two aforesaid immovable properties;
13.2 That the
plaintiff, the first defendant and Mr Jan Andreas Rautenbach are the
trustees;
13.3 That the
plaintiff and the first defendant undertook in the settlement
agreement to take a joint Trust decision
to transfer the M[...]
property into the name of the plaintiff (clause 5.3 of the
settlement);
13.4 That the
plaintiff and the first defendant undertook to jointly take a Trust
decision by the Trust to transfer
the Z[...] property into the name
of the plaintiff.
[14]
The plaintiff contends that the first defendant failed to give effect
to clause 5 of the settlement agreement relating
to the two aforesaid
properties. The plaintiff consequently claimed specific performance,
with an alternative of damages.
[15]
In paragraph 14.2 of the particulars of claim the following is
pleaded:
“
14.2 In light of the
aforesaid the plaintiff prays for an order of specific performance
against the first and second defendants
that:
14.2.1 The first
and second defendants be ordered to take all necessary steps to take
the joint decision with
the plaintiff in her capacity as the third
defendant to transfer the M[...] property and the Z[...] property to
the plaintiff within
7 days after the granting of the order;
14.2.2 The first,
second and third defendants take all necessary steps to effect the
transfer of the M[...] property
and the Z[...] property to the
plaintiff, and within 2 months after the granting of this order.”
[16]
The alternative for damages is based on the court declining specific
performance. The market value of the M[...] property
was pleaded to
be R9 000 000.00 and the Z[...] property R4 800 000.00.
It was also pleaded that the outstanding
bond amount relating to the
Z[...] property, owed to Standard Bank, is the amount of
R2 484 588.97. The damages
claim therefore totalled
R11 315 411.03.
[17]
As a further alternative the plaintiff pleads an oral agreement
concluded in January 2012 at Pretoria, when the Trust
acquired the
Z[...] property. The terms of the agreement are that the
plaintiff and the first defendant would be responsible
for the bond
payments and monthly instalments payable to Standard Bank, payment of
monthly levies, utilities and insurance.
Any amount paid by
either the plaintiff or the first defendant would be reflected in
their loan accounts in the Trust for the benefit
of the payer, and
that the loan account would be repayable on demand.
[18]
The plaintiff pleads that she paid R1 888 426.31 in respect
of the bond, paid levies in respect of the Z[...]
property of
R270 105.12 and paid utilities of R161 803.26 and insurance of
R305 012.80. The Trust is therefore indebted
to the plaintiff in
the amount of R2 625 347.50, comprising the total of the aforesaid,
which amount the plaintiff demanded from
the Trust.
[19]
As a further alternative the amount of R2 625 347.50 is
claimed on the basis of enrichment, the plaintiff contending
that
those expenses were incurred in the
bona fide
but mistaken
belief that the Z[...] property would be transferred to the plaintiff
in terms of the settlement agreement.
[20]
In Claim 4, the plaintiff claims against the Trust in terms of a
suretyship concluded on 25 January 2012 at Pretoria,
in terms of
which the plaintiff and the first defendant bound themselves as
sureties and co-principal debtors for the Trust for
the liabilities
of the Trust to Standard Bank.
[21]
The plaintiff claims that she made payment to Standard Bank in the
amount of R1 888 426.31, thereby extinguishing the
debt of the Trust
to Standard Bank in that amount, which amount she claims back from
the Trust.
THE
CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES IN THE COURT
A QUO
First
ground of exception
[22]
The first ground of exception was that
ex facie
a settlement,
the Trust is not a party to the agreement, therefore the plaintiff
has failed to disclose a cause of action against
the Trust.
[23]
The plaintiff contends that, in the introduction of paragraph 8 of
the particulars of claim, the plaintiff pleaded express,
alternatively tacit, alternatively implied terms of the settlement
agreement, expressly averring in paragraph 7.2 that the agreement
was
reached between the plaintiff and the first defendant, both acting
personally and in their capacities as trustees of the A[...]
Trust.
It was further contended that exception is not the appropriate stage
at which to settle questions of interpretation of the
contract.
Second
ground of exception
[24]
The second ground of exception relates to the alternative cause of
action in paragraph 14.4 of the particulars of claim,
where the
plaintiff pleads an oral agreement for payment of expenses pertaining
to the Z[...] property.
[25]
In the exception the first and second defendants contend that the
plaintiff failed to plead what the terms of the alleged
verbal
agreement were in concluding that the plaintiff is entitled to full
payment of the alleged payments from the Trust, or that
the alleged
terms continue to apply (paragraph 6 of the exception).
[26]
The excipients further contend that the plaintiff has not pleaded
that it was a term of the 2012 oral agreement that
the Z[...]
property would be transferred into the name of the plaintiff at some
future date. It is only in terms of the settlement
agreement that the
plaintiff would acquire ownership of the Z[...] property, after
fulfilment of a suspensive condition provided
for in clause 5.5
(paragraph 8 of the exception).
[27]
The fourth ground of exception expands on this issue and alleges a
failure to plead compliance with a suspensive condition.
As the
fourth ground of exception is interwoven with the second, it is not
dealt with separately.
[28]
The clause in question provides that the M[...] and Z[...] properties
will be transferred by Couzyn Hertzog & Horak
within 3 months
after signature of the agreement. The contention on behalf of
the plaintiff, in response to the second ground
of exception, was
that the plaintiff does not claim transfer of the M[...] and Z[...]
properties in terms of the alternative claim
but claims payment in
terms of the oral agreement.
[29]
The excipient contended that the plaintiff did not make averments
necessary to overcome or comply with the “suspensive
condition”.
[30]
Plaintiff denied that it was a suspensive condition but contended
that the interpretation of the agreement should stand
over for trial.
Third
ground of exception
[31]
The third ground of exception was that Rautenbach, the third trustee,
was not cited as a party to the proceedings.
[32]
The plaintiff’s response was that he had passed away and that
his trusteeship terminated on his death.
Fifth
ground of exception
[33]
The fifth ground of exception was that the plaintiff did not disclose
a cause of action against the Trust as principal
debtor in terms of
the suretyship agreement.
[34]
The plaintiff’s response was that clause 14.4 of the
particulars of claim sets out the terms of the oral agreement,
in
terms of which expenses paid in respect of the Z[...] property would
be reflected in the loan account of the Trust, which would
be
repayable on demand. In paragraph 14.4.11 of the particulars of
claim the plaintiff pleads that demand is made in terms
of the
summons.
Sixth
ground of exception
[35]
The exception provides that the plaintiff failed to attach “
KLM”
as referred in clause 6.2 of the settlement agreement, rendering the
pleadings excipiable.
[36]
The plaintiff’s response is that
Annexure KLM
refers to
a list of movable assets which the plaintiff would retain, and which
were present in the M[...] property. As the
plaintiff does not
claim any relief pertaining to the M[...] property, the annexure is
not required in terms of Rule 18(6) for
purposes of pleading.
THE
JUDGMENT A QUO
[37]
In the judgment the Court
a quo
expressly stated that she does
not intend dealing with all the grounds of exception but will focus
on the crux of the relief sought
against the assets owned by the
Trust. The Court found that, as a first step, the plaintiff
should have joined the Trust
to the proceedings (paragraph 7 of the
judgment). The Court found that the Trust had a direct and
substantial interest in
the relief sought and should have been joined
(paragraph 14). The Court concludes in paragraph 16:
“
16. To put
matters into perspective, the plaintiff’s third and fourth
claim is centred around the Trust
which is not a party to these
proceedings. Having sketched the above, the plaintiff’s
claim is excipiable.”
[38]
The Court found that the third trustee should have been cited. Having
discussed only the issue of joinder and having
found the Trust not to
be a party to the proceedings, the Court proceeded to uphold all six
grounds of exception (Order, paragraph
17 - CaseLines 0-8).
DISCUSSION
[39]
The parties advance similar arguments before this Court to those that
were raised before the Court
a quo
. It is trite that the
power of a court of appeal to intervene is triggered by the
identification of a misdirection by the
Court
a quo
.
[40]
In this case the Court
a quo
made a fundamental misdirection
by finding that the Trust was not a party to the proceedings.
[41]
During the hearing, counsel for the excipients contended that the
Court
a quo
misunderstood the complaint regarding the Trust.
The crux of the complaint was that Mr Rautenbach was not a party to
the settlement
agreement and therefore no valid agreement was
concluded between the parties and the Trust. This is not the
point raised
on the papers before us.The first ground of exception
referred to above illustrates this. In particular, it is not
the basis
upon which the Court
a quo
upheld the exception.
[42]
The particulars of claim make it clear that the plaintiff instituted
action against the first defendant and against the
Trust, citing the
remaining trustees at the time of institution of the action.
[43]
Although Mr Rautenbach was also an appointed trustee, he had passed
away by the time the action was instituted in the
Court
a quo
.
The death of a trustee results in the vacation of the office of
trustee.In
Du Plessis v Van Niekerk
2018 (6) SA 2018
(FB) at paragraph [30]) Daffue, J stated:
“
[30] …
The term ‘vacation of office’ may be regarded as more
problematic, but in my view it
is not. The authors in
Honoré
deal from 225 and further with five eventualities. The death of
a trustee is an obvious eventuality, as are the vacation
of office by
a trustee appointed
ex officio
, the revocation
of a constitution under which the trustee was appointed and the
termination of the trust. …”
[44]
The Court
a quo
therefore erred in not discerning that the
Trust was already a cited party in the proceedings that served before
her. As this was
the sole basis of the judgment of the Court
a
quo
, this Court does not have the benefit of the Court
a quo
’s
reasoning in respect of the other grounds of exception. This is in
itself an oversight by the Court
a quo
, particularly as she
upheld the exception on all six grounds that were raised. The
absence of a reasoned judgment for
the upholding of all six
grounds of exception complicates an assessment of the order appealed
against on appeal.
[45]
None of the grounds of exception that were raised should have been
upheld.
[46]
Insofar as the excipients contend that the settlement agreement
(
Annexure B1
to the particulars of claim) is an agreement only
between the plaintiff and the first defendant and does not constitute
evidence
of an agreement between those parties and the Trust, the
premise of the submission is one of interpretation. While
ex
facie
the written agreement, the Trust is not expressly cited as
a party, the pleadings pertaining to the agreement make it clear that
the parties acted in their personal and representative capacities.
So, for example, in clause 5 of the settlement agreement,
reference
is made to a joint decision as trustees.
[47]
It will rarely be appropriate to resolve an issue of interpretation
of a written agreement at exception stage. This particularly
so when
the issues arising from the exception involve facts not yet before
the court. In this instance it is apparent that evidence
may impact
the interpretation. It is therefore inappropriate to interpret the
agreement at the exception stage in order to
determine the
correctness of the pleadings (see
Francis v Sharp
2004
(3) SA 230
(C) at page 237).
[48]
It will be for the Trial Court to assess evidence in order to
determine whether the Trust was in fact a party to the
settlement
agreement or not. The primary ground of exception, the sole
basis on which the Court
a quo
upheld the exception, is
therefore fundamentally flawed.The trust was pleaded as a party to
the proceedings. Whether that is so
is for the trial court to
determine.
[49]
The second ground of exception relates to the plaintiff’s
entitlement to payment of disbursements from the Trust.
It is
alleged that insufficient allegations were made to make the Trust
liable. This is incorrect. The plaintiff is
calling up
her loan account which is payable on demand. The loan account
consists of the amounts that were disbursed on behalf
of the Trust
pertaining to the Z[...] property.
[50]
The allegation by the excipients that the terms in clause 5.5 of the
agreement constitutes a suspensive condition is
also flawed. It
is no more than a term of the agreement. The oral agreement
concluded in 2012 was not an agreement
aimed at effecting transfer of
the property. It reflects an agreement on how the parties would
deal with expenses incurred
by them in respect of Trust liabilities
pertaining to the Z[...] property.
[51]
The third ground of exception relates to the citation of the deceased
trustee. This has been dealt with above.
[52]
The fourth ground of exception is based on the excipient’s
interpretation of clause 5.5 as constituting a suspensive
condition.
As this is again an issue of interpretation, the exception stage is
not the time when these issues need to be
finally determined.
However, on the face of it, there is nothing suspensive about the
terms of clause 5.5. Compliance
with the time period was
premised upon all the parties complying with their obligations in
terms of the agreement. The plaintiff’s
claim is based on
non-compliance by the first defendant in his capacity as trustee to
take decisions that were meant to be taken
in terms of the settlement
agreement.
[53]
This ground must therefore fail.
[54]
The fifth ground relates to the claim based on the suretyship annexed
as
Annexure I
to the particulars of claim. In terms
thereof, the plaintiff and the first defendant bound themselves as
sureties for the
payment of the debts of the Trust in favour of
Standard Bank. The excipient contends that it is not pleaded
that Standard
Bank had made demand on the plaintiff for payment.
It is contended that she has no right of action against the Trust for
payments of amounts alleged to be made by her to the Trust in terms
of her obligation as surety.
[55]
The excipient misconstrues the particulars of claim. The
plaintiff contends that she made payments to Standard
Bank on behalf
of the Trust and not to the Trust. She recovers such
disbursements by calling up her loan account.
[56]
The position in law has not been decided finally whether a demand by
the creditor is a prerequisite for a liability of
a surety in terms
of a suretyship.
[57]
In
LAWSA, Suretyship
paragraph 303 the following is stated:
“
Where one co-surety has paid
only part of the principal debt the position is anything but clear.
Two questions arise in such
a case: Firstly, whether the paying
co-surety is entitled to any contribution at all before he or she has
paid the whole
debt, and secondly, if he or she is entitled to a
contribution whether that contribution should be in respect of the
full amount
paid by him or her or only in respect of the excess over
what would be his or her proportionate share of the debt. In
Lever v Buhrmann
it was clearly the view of the
court that a co-surety who has paid more than his proportionate share
of the principal debt (although
not the whole debt) has a right of
action against his co-sureties, that the question whether he has a
right to contribution in
respect of the full amount paid or only in
respect of the excess of that amount over his proportionate share of
the debt was not
touched upon. In
Nosworthy v Yorke
the question whether a co-surety can recover a
contribution before he has paid the whole debt was expressly left
undecided.
In
Hoyer v Martin
the court
held that in the case of a continuing suretyship a surety who was
paid the whole of the principal debt outstanding at
a particular time
may claim a contribution from a co-surety, even though the principal
debtor may thereafter incur further debts
for which the sureties will
be liable. In
Noakes v Whiteing
, however,
Davies J inclined strong into the view that until the creditor has
been paid in full, a co-surety who has paid more than
his
proportionate share of the debt is not entitled to recover a
contribution from another co-surety, but this part of the judgment
was arbiter. In the latest judicial pronouncement of the matter
Van Zijl JP held in effect in
ASA Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Smit
that a co-surety who becomes co-surety by reason of
his having entered into a separate deed of suretyship cannot be sued
by fellow
co-surety for his proportionate share until the latter has
paid the full debt which was guaranteed by the sureties.
The
ASA Investments
case is
strongly criticised by Caney, who argues that on equitable grounds a
co-surety who has paid part of the principal debt
should be allowed
to recover a proportionate share of what he or she has paid (not
merely of the excess of what he or she has paid
over his or her
proportionate share) from each of his or her co-sureties. There
is certainly force in Caney’s argument:
On the other
hand, he or she dismisses perhaps too lightly the objection of the
courts to the multiplicity of actions and the ‘tortuous
and
expensive procedure’ that may result if sureties were allowed
to start litigating amongst them before the creditor has
been paid in
full.”
[58]
In this instance the claim is not against the co-surety but against
the principal debtor. A surety has a right of recourse
against the
principal debtor for payments made as surety to extinguish the
liability of the debtor
pro tanto
as against the
creditor ( see
ABSA Bank v Scharrighuisen
2000(2) SA 998 (C)
at par [12] and [28]).
[59]
This ground of exception therefore fails.
[60]
The sixth ground of exception relates to the failure to annex
Annexure KLM
to the particulars of claim. That annexure
is a schedule of movables, which are irrelevant to the pleadings.
No relief
is claimed in respect of movable assets, being the list
contained in
Annexure KLM
.
[61]
At best, even if pleadings did cover the content of
Annexure KLM
,
the failure to annex
Annexure KLN
would render the pleadings
vague and embarrassing. That, however, is not the exception
raised before us. If the excipients
had correctly identified
this ground as one rendering the pleadings vague and embarrassing,
the plaintiffs would have had an opportunity
of responding to a rule
23(1) notice to cure the cause of complaint by annexing the annexure
in question. However, the excipients
went straight for the
jugular, on an issue not relevant to the pleadings. This
exception must fail.
[62]
In the premises there are no grounds upon which the judgment of the
Court
a quo
could be upheld.
[63]
The issue of costs arises. In particular, the question arises
whether the Trust should be burdened with the costs
in circumstances
where the first defendant (first respondent in the appeal) has failed
to comply with the terms of the settlement
agreement. The
settlement agreement is not merely an undertaking to sign a Trust
resolution in respect of the transfer of
properties. It is an
agreement that has been made an order of court. Non-compliance
with an order of court in such
circumstances is a relevant factor in
determining liability for costs. In this instance, such
liability lies with the first
respondent (first excipient and first
defendant
a quo
).
[64]
In the premises the following order is made:
ORDER:
1. The appeal is upheld with
costs.
2. The judgment and order of the
Court
a quo
is set aside and is replaced with the following:
“
The exception is dismissed
with costs, such costs to be paid by the first defendant on Scale B.”
LABUSCHAGNE
J
Judge
of the High Court
BAM
J: I concur
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
MBONGWE
J: I concur
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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