Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 636South Africa
Strydom N.O v Jennings and Another (66445/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 636 (19 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 June 2025
Headnotes
in joint ownership with the first respondent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Strydom N.O v Jennings and Another (66445/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 636 (19 June 2025)
Strydom N.O v Jennings and Another (66445/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 636 (19 June 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
66445/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
19/06/2025
In
the application of:
PIETER
HENDRIK STRYDOM N.O.
Applicant
(in
his capacity as Executor in the estate of late Vicky Adele Jennings)
and
JUSTIN
BARRY JENNINGS
First Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
J
The
following order was granted
ex tempore
with reasons to follow:
ORDER
[1]
The attorney of the first respondent is directed
to come on record forthwith and to upload the necessary notice onto
CaseLines.
[2]
The consolidation application of the first
respondent is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
of the curator ad
litem, on Scale B.
[3]
It is confirmed that the death of Dr Jennings
terminated the marriage with the first respondent and her joint
ownership of immovable
properties held in joint ownership with the
first respondent.
[4]
The draft order commencing at CaseLines 032-6 is
attached hereto marked “X” and is made an order of court.
JUDGMENT - REASONS
[1]
The applicant is the executor
of the late Dr Vicky Adele Jennings who
owned two immovable properties jointly with her spouse, the first
respondent. One is situated
at Carswald Estate in Midrand and the
other in the Eastern Cape. They were in the midst of divorce
proceedings when Dr Jennings
commenced this application for
termination of their joint ownership.
[2]
There are two minor children,
aged 11 and 7, whose interests are
protected in the condonation application referred to below by their
curatrix ad litem, Adv Becker.
[3]
In the pending divorce proceedings
the issues are the maintenance of
their two minor children, their primary care and the application of
the accrual system. The applicant
has since passed away and her
estate is represented by her executor, who persists in the
application. The first respondent brought
a counter-application for
consolidation of this application with the divorce proceedings.
[4]
The death of Dr Jennings has
terminated both the marriage and the
joint ownership in the two immovable properties (see the authorities
below). What remains
in these termination proceedings, absent
agreement between the executor and the first respondent, is to
determine a way to give
effect to the termination of joint ownership.
THE CONSOLIDATION APPLICATION
[5]
The first respondent has brought
a substantive consolidation
application for consolidation of the application for termination of
joint ownership and the divorce
proceedings. The bulk of the argument
centred on the consolidation application. Counsel for the first
respondent contends that
the relief sought in the application and the
divorce overlap to such an extent that it is convenient to
consolidate the two processes.
The consolidation was opposed on the
basis that there is not an overlap, and the divorce should go to
trial on the remaining disputes.
The curatrix made common cause with
the applicant in opposing the consolidation.
[6]
It is trite that consolidation
would be appropriate where it would
avoid a multiplicity of actions on the same issues. In this instance
there are compelling reasons
why this is not applicable on the
current facts.
[7]
Save for the best interests of
the minors, what remains to be decided
in the divorce is not the distribution or liquidation of assets, but
the extent of an accrual
claim. It is a claim eventually sounding in
money.
[8]
In
BM v BNG
(unreported case number 2008/25274)
(South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg – as it them was)
Brassey AJ describes a
party’s interest in an accrual in
divorce proceedings as “
purely equitable for, questions
of dissipation aside, it becomes exigible only ‘at the
dissolution of the marriage …
by death or divorce’ in
terms of s 4 (1) of the Act.”
[9]
The right to share is not a
vested right but a contingent right to participate in the benefits of
the accrual upon dissolution of
the marriage (Cloete J in
Reeder
v Softline Ltd and Another
2001
(2) SA 844
(W)
at
848 I to 849 B).
[10]
The disposal of property jointly owned is not part of
a claim to
share in an accrual. At best it may form part of a court’s
determination of how an established accrual claim is
to be
discharged. But in this instance the right to an accrual first needs
to be established at trial.
[11]
A second reason why the consolidation is not appropriate
is because
it seeks to consolidate an application with an action. No suggestion
of how the pleadings will look was offered. On
the face of it, it is
undesirable to consolidate processes that are not designed to be
consolidated.
[12]
I am not persuaded that a consolidation would save court
time. On the
contrary, it will introduce contrived concepts of what the pleadings
in a hybrid process consisting of both motion
and action proceedings,
would be. The consolidation application therefore cannot succeed.
THE JOINT OWNERSHIP
[13]
The death of Dr Jennings terminated the joint ownership.
In
Havemann’s Assignee v Havemann’s Executor
1927 AD
473
Wessels JA states at 477(in fine):
“
During the lifetime of the
spouses, D. A. Havemann did not own the estate in two capacities,
i.e., as the owner of the one half
and possessor of the other half.
The spouses during their lifetime were the joint owners of the whole,
and only upon the death
of one was the joint ownership broken.
Mrs. Havemann would naturally therefore, look upon her husband as the
owner of the estate
which he held in his possession. It must be noted
that no life interest is specifically bequeathed to the survivor, but
the latter
is told to remain in full possession.”
[14]
In terms of the
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
, her
interest in the property firstly passed to the Master and is now
administered by her duly appointed Executor.
In the
absence of agreement between the parties the first respondent has
hardly any defence to a claim for sale of the properties
in question.
[15]
The termination of joint ownership by means of the
actio communi
dividundo
has two sides to it. First, the right to terminate. And
secondly, once such a right has been established, how to give effect
to
such termination. Reinders J stated the following in
Marogoa v
Marogoa
2023 JDR 0198:
“
[4]
It is trite that where property is owned in joint ownership, each
such co-owner has an undivided share therein. The share need not
be
equal. As a general rule, every co-owner would be entitled to have
such co-ownership terminated with the
actio communi
dividundo.
[5]
A party merely has to allege and proof(sic) the existence of the
joint ownership and
a refusal by the other to agree to the
termination and/or inability to agree in respect of the method of
termination (or an agreement
to terminate but refusal to comply
therewith). A respondent (defendant) does not have a plethora of
defences once any of the above
requisites has been proven. The
general rule is that a court has a wide discretion and would follow a
method that is fair and equitable
to both parties. This would include
for example a sale by public auction and division of the nett amount,
in appropriate cases
an allocation of the property to one owner
subject to payment of compensation and even a private auction
restricted to co-owners
and division of the nett amount.
“
[16]
As death of Dr Jennings has already terminated the joint
ownership
and established the right to a division, the only remaining issue is
the means of giving effect to the division flowing
from the
termination of joint ownership. The applicant has prepared a
draft order which provides for the sale of the immovable
properties
and for a settling of debts due by the first respondent and the
estate, the terms of which were considered and debated
in court.
[17]
The first respondent only questions one prayer in the
draft, ie the
clause naming the proposed liquidator, but merely because the
applicant proposed her appointment. The strained relationship
between
the applicant and the first respondent is the cause of this distrust.
[18]
There is no factual basis for doubting the suitability
of appointing
the proposed liquidator, who is a legal practitioner in good standing
with the Legal Practice Council.
[19]
In the premises I granted the order set out above incorporating
the
draft order marked X.
LABUSCHAGNE
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv A.J Schoeman
Instructed
by:
NBP
Attorneys.
481
Anderson Street, Menlo Park.
Pretoria
Counsel
for Respondent:
Adv D Matlatle
Instructed
by:
Richard
Sithi Attorneys.
210
Amarand Avenue.
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