Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 738South Africa
Georgiou N.O and Another v Poole and Another (A143/2024 ; 2566/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 738 (21 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 July 2025
Headnotes
Mr Poole had satisfied the requirements for the provisional sequestration of the deceased estate, Grounds of appeal [9] Various grounds were raised in this appeal. However, the appeal will be limited to the three grounds which we find pertinent:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Georgiou N.O and Another v Poole and Another (A143/2024 ; 2566/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 738 (21 July 2025)
Georgiou N.O and Another v Poole and Another (A143/2024 ; 2566/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 738 (21 July 2025)
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sino date 21 July 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEAL
CASE NO: A143/2024
HIGH
COURT CASE NO: 2566/2021
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
21.07.25
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE N GEORGIOU TRUST
Trust
Registration Number: TMP 757
namely
MAUREEN
LYNNETTE GEORGIOU N.O.
First
Appellant
JOSEPH
REYNOLDS CHEMALY N.O.
Second
Appellant
and
SYDNEY
CLARENCE WILLIAM POOLE
First
Respondent
L.B.
SAFFY N.O.
(The
executor of the deceased estate of N. GEORGIOU)
Second
Respondent
In
re:
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE N GEORGIOU TRUST
Trust
Registration Number: TMP 757 namely
The
Intervening Party
MAUREEN
LYNETTE GEORGIOU N.O.
JOSEPH
REYNOLDS CHEMALY N.O.
In
re:
SYDNEY
CLARENCE WILLIAM POOLE
Applicant
and
L.B.
SAFFY N.O.
(The
executor of the deceased estate of N. GEORGIOU)
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on case lines. The date and time of
hand down is deemed to be 10:00 on 21 July 2025.
TEFFO,
J (MOTHA, J AND LENYAl, J CONCURRING)
Introduction
[1]
The first respondent, Mr Poole obtained monetary judgment for an
amount of R4 400
000,00 plus interest and costs against Zephan (Pty)
Ltd ("
Zephan
"), previously known as Zelpy 2095 (Pty)
Ltd, Mr Georgiou ("
the deceased'
) and the N Georgiou
Trust ("
the Trust
") jointly and severally. Writs of
execution were obtained and executed against Mr Georgiou's properties
to which
nulla bona
returns were issued. For the purposes of
this judgment, it suffices to mention that Mr Georgiou was the
managing director and sole
shareholder of Zephan and that Zephan is
currently under business rescue.
[2]
On 20 January 2021 Mr Poole launched an application for the
provisional sequestration
of Mr Georgiou. Mr Georgiou opposed the
application. He filed an answering affidavit in opposition of the
sequestration application
and a counterapplication to stay the
sequestration application. Subsequently in September 2021 Mr Georgiou
died. Afterwards L.B.
Saffy N.O. ("
the executor of the
deceased estate
") substituted Mr Georgiou as a respondent in
the sequestration application. Prior to his death, Mr Georgiou was
one of the
trustees of the Trust.
[3]
The application for the provisional sequestration of Mr Georgiou's
deceased estate
was set down for argument in the opposed motion on 24
January 2024. On 23 January 2024 the trustees of the Trust (the first
and
second appellant) brought an application for leave to intervene
as the respondents in the sequestration application to oppose it.
[4]
The basis thereof was that Mr Poole was no longer a creditor of the
deceased estate
in terms of clause 34 of the business rescue plan of
Zephan. If necessary, this clause will be dealt with later.
[5]
On 24 January 2024 the court
a quo
heard the intervention
application, the counterapplication and the sequestration
application. It dismissed the intervention application
and the
counterapplication and granted the provisional sequestration of the
deceased's estate.
[6]
The matter is before us on appeal. Leave to appeal has been granted
to the Full Court
by the Supreme Court of Appeal ("
the SCA
")
against the judgment and order(s) (including the order as to costs)
of the court
a quo
.
[7]
The second respondent ("the executor of the deceased estate")
did not participate
in the appeal.
The
findings of the court
a quo
[8]
In dismissing the intervention application the court
a quo
found that the Trust does not have locus standi to bring the
intervention application. It also found that the trustees of the
Trust could not act on behalf of the Trust as they were inquorate and
failed to appoint another trustee when a vacancy occurred
after the
death of Mr Georgiou as was required of them in terms of the Trust
Deed. The court
a quo
further found that the provisions of
clause 34 of the business rescue plan of Zephan do not exclude the
right of Mr Poole to apply
for the compulsory sequestration of the
deceased estate. In addition, it held that Mr Poole had satisfied the
requirements for
the provisional sequestration of the deceased
estate,
Grounds
of appeal
[9]
Various grounds were raised in this appeal. However, the appeal will
be limited to
the three grounds which we find pertinent:
(a)
The trustees of the Trust contend that the court
a quo
erred
by holding that the Trust does not have
locus standi
to bring
an application for intervention to oppose the sequestration
application against the deceased estate.
(b)
They claim that the court
a quo
misdirected itself by holding
that they cannot litigate on behalf of the Trust as they failed to
comply with the provisions of
the Trust Deed which require them to
appoint a third Trustee when a vacancy occurred after the death of Mr
Georgiou. They assert
that the court
a quo
ought to have found
that the Trust Deed, when read purposively and wholistically, does
allow them to bring the intervention application.
(c)
A submission was also made that Mr Poole lacked
locus standi
to proceed with an application for the sequestration of the deceased
estate since the judgment debt he relies on for the application,
had
been ceded to a third party ("the Proposer") under the
business rescue plan of Zephan.
Applicable
legal principles
[10]
It is trite that a court of appeal may only interfere on appeal if
there was a misdirection of
fact or a wrong principle of law.
[1]
Locus
standi
of the Trust
[11]
The trustees contend that the Trust is the sole heir and beneficiary
in the deceased estate.
It would lose out on receiving an inheritance
of not less than R200 000,00 if the sequestration order is
granted. It therefore
has a direct and substantial interest to
intervene as a party in the sequestration application against the
deceased estate and
oppose it.
[12]
It is contended that the personal right that the Trust acquires as an
heir to claim against the
executor of the deceased estate its
inheritance and/or benefits in the estate at some future date
provides it with sufficient legal
interest to intervene in the
sequestration application and to introduce a defence to the
sequestration application that the executor
cannot rely on.
[13]
I have read the cases the trustees relied on in support of their
argument and I find them to
be distinguishable. One of the cases
referred to is
Jones
and Another v Beatty NO and Others
[2]
where an executor was asked by the heirs to amend a liquidation and
distribution account. The court found that the heirs had
locus
standi
to seek such relief. The case is distinguishable in that it was
between the executor and the heirs which is not the case in the
appeal before us.
[14]
The right of an heir to claim an inheritance in the estate of the
deceased was described by the
authors in Wille's
Principles
of South African Law
[3]
as follows:
"However, in the
light of modern system of administration of estates that replaced the
common law system of universal succession,
the right of the
beneficiaries to inherit is no longer absolute nor an assured one. If
the deceased estate, after confirmation
of the liquidation and
distribution account, is found to be insolvent, none of the
beneficiaries will obtain any property or assets
at all. In the case
of a legacy, the legatee will only obtain the property bequeathed to
him, if, first the property belonged to
the testator, for the Will of
one person cannot confer a real right in favour of another person
over property belonging to a third
person, and if secondly, the
assets of the deceased not left as legacies are sufficient to pay his
debts. In any event, an heir
cannot vindicate from a third person
property which the heir alleges form part of the deceased estate,
only the executor has power.
It follows from the above considerations
that an heir does not upon the death of a testator acquire the
ownership of the assets
of the deceased but merely has a vested claim
against the executor for payment, delivery or transfer of the
property comprising
the inheritance, and this claim is enforceable
only when the liquidation and distribution account has been
confirmed. The heir
in fact becomes the owner of movable property
only on the delivery of it, or of immovable property upon
registration ...
The modern position is therefore that a
beneficiary has merely a personal right ... against the executor and
does not acquire ownership
by virtue of a Will
."
[15]
The above position has long been settled and confirmed in many
decisions of our courts. See
Greenberg
and Others v Estate Greenberg
[4]
and
W v
Williams-Ashman NO and Others
[5]
.
[16]
It has by now become settled law that the joinder of a party is only
required as a matter of
necessity - as opposed to a matter of
convenience - if that party has a direct and substantial interest
which may be affected prejudicially
by the judgment of the court in
the proceedings concerned.
[6]
The mere fact that a party may have an interest in the outcome of the
litigation does not warrant a non-joinder plea. The right
of a party
to validly raise the objection that the other parties should have
been joined to the proceedings, has thus been held
to be a limited
one.
[7]
[17]
Relying on the decision in
Ploughman
NO v Pauw
[8]
the appellant contends that apart from a joinder out of necessity, a
court can join a party under the common law grounds of convenience,
equity, the saving of costs and the avoidance of multiplicity of
actions. The court therefore has an inherent power to order the
joinder of further parties in an action or application which has
already begun, to ensure that that person's interest in the subject
matter of the dispute, and whose rights may be affected by the
judgment, are before court.
[18]
In my view the decision in
Ploughman
NO v Pauw
[9]
,
does not support the trustees' case. In that case the second
respondent who was joined as a party to the proceedings had acquired
ownership of the property which was the subject matter of the dispute
between the parties, together with her brother, the first
respondent
by acquisitive prescription.
[19]
The Trust as an heir and beneficiary in the deceased estate does not
acquire ownership of the
assets of the deceased upon the deceased's
death. It merely has a vested claim against the executor for payment,
delivery or transfer
of the property and its claim is only
enforceable when the liquidation and distribution account has been
confirmed. The Trust merely
has a personal right which is of a
financial nature against the executor. This right which I regard as
contingent is deferred until
the determination of a preceding
interest. It is for the time being uncertain if it will ever take
effect.
[20]
Although it is trite that a party with a direct and substantial
interest should be joined to
the proceedings, the qualification for
joinder is that the interest must be a legal interest as opposed to a
financial interest.
The interest of the Trust being a financial
interest and not a legal interest does not confer it
locus standi
in indicio
to intervene as a party in the sequestration
application. In my view the court
a quo's
finding that the
Trust does not have the right to the assets of the estate or a
"
sufficient legal interest
'' to afford it
locus standi
in judicio
to succeed with the intervention application is
correct and cannot be faulted.
[21]
Having said that I therefore deem it unnecessary to deal with the
other remaining grounds. Consequently,
the appeal must fail.
[22]
Mr Poole also brought an application to adduce further evidence in
the appeal which related to
a matter that is pending before the Free
State High Court and has to do with the setting aside of the business
rescue plan of Zephan.
The application was not proceeded with.
Costs
[23]
Mr Poole sought costs
de bonis propriis
against the Trust and
the trustees jointly and severally the one paying the other to be
absolved. He contends that the defence
that the trustees intended to
raise in the intervention application to the effect that in terms of
clause 34 of the business rescue
plan of Zephan, Mr Poole's claim
against the deceased estate has been ceded to the proposer and
therefore he would not succeed
to sequestrate the deceased estate, is
the same as those rejected by the SCA in the precious matters which
dealt with the provisions
of the business rescue plan in respect of
the other companies, where the deceased was involved. It was
submitted that reliance
by the trustees on the effect of the business
rescue plan of Zephan as a defence to the sequestration application
against the deceased
estate is an abuse of the court's processes and
therefore justifies a punitive costs order against the Trust and its
trustees.
[24]
Having considered the matter, I am not persuaded that the appeal
justifies a punitive costs order
against the Trust and the trustees.
[25]
Regarding the costs in the application to adduce further evidence in
the appeal I find no reason
that justifies the granting of a cost
order against Mr Poole.
Order
[26]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
2.
The appellants are ordered to pay the costs of the appeal on a party
and party
scale C.
3.
The application to adduce further evidence in the appeal is dismissed
and there
shall be no order as costs in this application.
M
J TEFFO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
M
MOTHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
M
M D LENYAI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the appellant :
R du Plessis SC
Instructed
by
:
Cooper
& Associates Inc
c/o Couzyn Hertzog &
Horak
For
the first respondent : L Bolt
Instructed
by
:
Le
Grange Attorneys
Heard
on
:
23
January 2025
Delivered
on
:
21 July
2025
[1]
Florence
v Government of the Republic of South Africa
2014
(6) SA 456 (CC) at para 114
[2]
1998 (3) SA 1097
(T)
[3]
9
th
edition
[4]
1955 (3) SA 361
(AD) at 364-365
[5]
2023 (4) SA 113
(SCA) at para 13
[6]
See
Bowring
NO v Vrededorp Properlies CC
2007 (5) SA 391(SCA)
para 21
[7]
See
Burger
v Rand Water Board
2007 (1) SA 30
(SCA) para 7
[8]
2006 (SA) 334 (C) at 341E-F
[9]
Supra
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