Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 838South Africa
J.G.V v A.V (5223/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 838 (11 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 August 2025
Headnotes
in part, that: “[9] The mere fact that the assets vested in the trustee and did not form part of the respondent’s estate does not per se exclude them from consideration when determining what must be taken into account when making a redistribution order. A trust is administered and controlled by trustees, much as the affairs of a close corporation
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## J.G.V v A.V (5223/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 838 (11 August 2025)
J.G.V v A.V (5223/2020) [2025] ZAGPPHC 838 (11 August 2025)
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sino date 11 August 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
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Division
of joint estate
–
Trust
and assets – Contention that trust was plaintiff’s
alter ego – Assets should be considered part of
joint estate
– Trust was used to shield assets – Affairs were
relevant to determining true value of joint estate
– Courts
may pierce trust veil where trust is used as an alter ego to evade
financial obligations – Evidence
sought was relevant and
admissible – Could assist in achieving an equitable division
of joint estate – Objections
dismissed – Trust
Property Control Act 57 of 1988, s 12.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number:5223/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11/08/25
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
J[...]
G[...] V[...]
Plaintiff
and
A[...]
V[...]
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
J
[1]
On 10 January 2020, the plaintiff has instituted a divorce action in
which he
seeks, inter alia, a divorce decree; the division of the
joint estate and the continual maintenance of the parties’
youngest
child who is currently an adult; and costs. The
parties were married in community of property on 17 December 1983.
[2]
The defendant is defending the divorce action and has filed a plea
and counter
claim. In her counterclaim, the defendant, besides
a decree of divorce, also seeks the division of the joint estate,
maintenance
for herself for life or until re-marriage, the
appointment of a receiver and costs. In respect of the prayer
relating to
the appointment of a receiver, the defendant alleges that
during the marriage, the plaintiff was secretive about his and the
joint
estate’s financial affairs and that she does not have
full knowledge of the nature and extent of the joint estate, factor
that would influence the division of the joint estate.
[3]
It is common cause the marriage between the parties has irretrievably
broken
down. The hearing of evidence with regard to the divorce
action revolves around the assets forming the joint estate which
has
to be divided as sought by the parties.
[4]
During the marriage, the
plaintiff and the defendant acquired various residences.
Further, in
1998 the V[...]
Family Trust (the Trust) was established, with the plaintiff as
founder and the plaintiff, the defendant and their
children were
trust beneficiaries and the parties. The plaintiff and the
defendant, including a third party became trustees
of the Trust.
In 2011, various amendments of the Trust deed were effected,
including,
inter alia
,
the removal of the defendant as a capital beneficiary. Counsel
for the defendant submitted that the defendant will dispute
that she
signed the resolution authorising the amendment to the trust deed and
contends that her signature was forged. The
defendant has
admitted in his evidence that the defendant’s signature on the
trust deed and her purported signature on the
resolution are not the
same.
[5]
One of the residences
belonging to the joint estate was transferred to the trust during
1998. In 2011 the trust deed was amended.
[6]
The
Trust owns or has interests in the following entities:
6.1 Skiathos
B2 Property Investments CC (trust has a 100% interest); and
6.2 NRB
Capital Solutions (Pty) Ltd (NRB Capital) (trust holds 100% of the
entity’s shares).
[7]
NRB Capital in turn owns the following:
7.1
Forest Dawn Solutions (Pty) Ltd (NRB Capital holds
90% shareholding);
7.2
NRB Rental Solutions (Pty) Ltd (NRB Rental) (NRB
Capital holds 100% shareholding);
7.3
Shelf Investments No. 32 (Pty) Ltd (NRB holds 100%
shareholding); and
7.4
NRB Services (Pty) Ltd (NRB Capital holds 100%
shareholding).
[8]
In turn NRB Rental Solutions
(Pty) Ltd owns 20% of Planet Finance Corporation (Pty) Ltd.
[9]
Further, it appears that the
plaintiff also has a 100% interest in Scrap ‘n 4 Africa (Pty)
Ltd and a 10% interest in J Kwadrant
(Pty) Ltd.
[10]
During the plaintiff’s examination, counsel for the plaintiff,
his counsel continually objected to
questions posed to the plaintiff
which related to the Trust and/or its related business, arguing that
the questions posed to the
plaintiff about the Trust and its
associated entities would elicit evidence which is inadmissible.
[11]
The defendant contentions that the plaintiff's counsel's continual
objections to questions posed to
the plaintiff during cross
examination concerning the Trust are detrimental to the claim of the
defendant's spouse. The defendant
asserts that they are not barred
from enquiring about the Trust, contending that the plaintiff has
abused the Trust form and that
the Trust serves as the plaintiff's
alter ego
, thereby necessitating the appointment of a receiver
to ascertain the complete extent and nature of the parties’
joint estate's
assets.
[12]
The plaintiff has raised
three grounds upon which he contends that the line of questioning the
plaintiff during cross examination
is inappropriate for the following
reasons:
12.1
that the Trust is an interested party and should have been joined in
the divorce proceedings (non-joinder);
12.2
that the questions posed to the plaintiff in relation to Astfin
relate to certain guarantees and/or agreements, were
res judicata as
another court has already dealt with those issues and made a finding
(res judicata); and
12.3
that the defendant’s plea and counter claim are insufficient in
that from the pleadings, it is not apparent that
the issues relating
to the Trust as the alter ego of the plaintiff and Astfin were not
pertinently raised (insufficient pleading).
[13]
The issue to be determined is whether the defendant’s counsel
may, during the cross-examination
of the plaintiff, refer to or pose
questions or make certain statements regarding various matters
relating to the Trust as the
alter ego
of the plaintiff and
its associated businesses and whether such evidence is admissible.
[14]
It was submitted on behalf of the defendant that the Trust is in fact
the
alter ego
of the plaintiff and that the plaintiff is in de
facto control of the Trust and that but for the Trust, the plaintiff
would have
acquired and owned the assets in his own name.
[15]
It was submitted that the
plaintiff has control over the trust in a manner is set out in the
matter of
Badenhorst
v Badenhorst
[1]
and
P A F
v
S C F
[2]
where the courts allowed for the piercing of the ‘trust veil’
in circumstances where it is found that there was an
abuse of the
trust form to the detriment of a spouse’s claim to a
redistribution or accrual. In the
Badenhorst
case
(
supra
)
the court, held in part, that:
“
[9]
The mere fact that the assets vested in the trustee and did not form
part of
the respondent’s estate does not per se exclude them
from consideration when determining what must be taken into account
when making a redistribution order. A trust is administered and
controlled by trustees, much as the affairs of a close corporation
are controlled by its members and a company by its shareholders.
To succeed in a claim that trust assets be included in the
estate of
one of the parties to a marriage there needs to be evidence that such
party controlled the trust and but for the trust
would have acquired
and owned the assets in his own name. Control must be de facto
and not necessarily
de
iure
.
A nominee of a sole shareholder may have
de
jure
control of the affairs of the company but that the
de
fact
o
control rests with a shareholder.
De
iure
control of a trust is in the hands of the trustees but very often the
founder in business or family trusts appoints close relatives
or
friends who are either supine or do the bidding of the appointer.
De facto
the founder controls the trust. To determine whether a party
has such control it is necessary to first have regard to the
terms of
the trust, and secondly to consider the evidence of how the affairs
of the trust were conducted during the marriage.“
[16]
The defendant’s counsel further referred to the following as an
illustration of the
de facto
control the plaintiff allegedly
has on the Trust and its associated businesses: (i) that the
plaintiff had admitted in evidence
that when he signed a guarantee
for Astfin (Pty) Ltd, he had done so in his personal capacity,
thereby binding the joint estate;
(ii) that when the trust deed was
amended and the defendant was removed as a capital beneficiary and
the plaintiff was appointed
as an income beneficiary, the amendment
provides that when a majority vote takes place, the vote of the
plaintiff shall be part
of that majority vote for as long as he
remains, trustee which according to the defendant signifies that the
plaintiff has to be
involved in any decision of the trust thereby
maintaining control over the trust; and (iii) that even though the
Trust Property
Control Act provides for the opening of a separate
bank account, no bank account was opened for the Trust.
Instead,
the entities owned by the Trust conduct their own banking
accounts and none of the income accruing to those entities is
transferred
to the Trust. Counsel submitted that this evidence
points to the fact that it is the plaintiff’s intention to use
the
income from these entities owned by the trust for his own
benefit. This point was not taken further as there was an
objection
with regard to this question from the plaintiff’s
counsel on the basis that the Trust is an interested party and should
have
been joined to these proceedings.
[17]
With regard to the
non-joinder objection, counsel for the defendant submitted that in
light of the above submission, it was not
necessary to join the Trust
as the court would, in light of the allegations that the Trust is the
alter ego of the plaintiff, use
its inherent jurisdiction to ‘pierce
the trust veil’ as was endorsed in
P
A F v S C F
[3]
and
Badenhorst
(
supra
).
[18]
With regards to the plaintiff’s objection
of insufficiency of the pleadings, it is the defendant’s
contention that,
even though it could be said that the defendant’s
pleadings were insufficiently drafted, it is clear from the pleadings
that
the Trust and the entities linked to it are relevant to the
relief sought and that the plaintiff would not be prejudiced.
It was submitted on behalf of the defendant that in her plea, in
seeking for the division of the joint estate, the defendant alluded
to the fact that she does not have full knowledge of the nature and
extent of the assets of the joint estate, hence the prayer
for the
appointment of a receiver in order to identify the assets forming
part of the joint estate in order to determine the true
value of the
joint estate. In this regard defendant’s counsel referred
to annexure CC1 to the defendant’s plea
which reads in part as
follows:
“
8.6
obtain copies of the financial statements of any companies,
corporations, trust or business in which the plaintiff, the
defendant
and/or the joint estate of the parties may have or in the past may
have had an interest;
8.7
to inspect the books of account of the companies, close corporations,
trust or business in which the plaintiff,
the defendant and/or the
joint state of the parties may have all in the past may have had an
interest.”
[19]
It is the defendant’s contention that
even where an issue has not been pleaded, the court has the inherent
jurisdiction to
decide the matter if the issue is fully ventilated
during the trial proceedings. In this regard reference was made to
the
P A F
matter
(
supra)
where
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
“[30]
It must be borne in mind that this court has inherent jurisdiction to
decide a matter
even where it has not been pleaded, provided that
such matter was ventilated before it. Here, it is not a case of an
issue not
having been pleaded. It was pleaded if only in elegantly
so. As explained in Van Mentz v Provident assurance Corporation of
Africa
Ltd 1961 (1) SA115 (A) at 122, if the real issue emerges
during the course of the trial, it would be proper to treat the
issues
as enlarged where this can be done without prejudice to the
party against whom the enlargement is to be used.”
[20]
With regard to the issue of non-joinder defendant’s counsel
submitted that it was not necessary
for the Trust and its association
businesses to be joined as a party in these proceedings for the
court to determine whether
its assets should be included in the joint
estate.
[21]
It is the plaintiff’s contention that the questions posed to
the plaintiff have no relation to what
the defendant has pleaded.
Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that in her pleadings, the
defendant did not make any reference
to the allegation that third
parties, the Trust and/or its related companies, nor to the fact that
the plaintiff is abusing the
trust form for his own benefit. It
was further submitted that the defendant should have pleaded her case
in respect to the
Trust and/or its businesses. It was argued on
behalf of the plaintiff that a party must be aware of the case he is
to answer
to.
[22]
It is the plaintiff’s contention that the court is dealing with
the interests of parties not before
it.
On
behalf of the plaintiff it was submitted that the Trust and its
associated companies have a substantial interest in the divorce
proceedings and that they should have been joined. In this regard,
reference was made to the matter of
Y B
v S B
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) where the
court stated that:
“
[35]
I agree with Ms Gassner that a crucial issue which the trial court
will
have to determine in assessing the extent of the first
defendant’s estate for the purposes of the plaintiff’s
accrual
is whether the assets ostensibly held in the name of the
trustees are in fact beneficially owned by the first defendant, as is
alleged by the plaintiff.”
[23]
It was further submitted on
the plaintiff’s behalf that the defendant should have joined
the Trust and its associated businesses
to which the defendant makes
reference to as any decision/finding made by the court will impact on
the interests of the Trust and
its related businesses.
[24]
Furthermore, plaintiff’s counsel
submitted that the issues relating to the businesses of the trust
have already been dealt
with by another court and is not up to the
plaintiff to rehash the issues dealt with in that other
matter(reference in this regard
is made to the matter of
V[...]
and Another v Astfin (SA) Pty Ltd and Others
2023
JDR 3412 (GJ).
[25]
It is the plaintiff’s contention that the
questions posed to the plaintiff have no relation to what the
defendant has pleaded.
Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that
in her pleadings, the defendant did not make any reference to third
parties, the Trust
and/or its related companies, nor to the fact that
the plaintiff is abusing the trust form for his own benefit. It
was further
submitted that the defendant should have pleaded her case
in respect to the Trust and/or its businesses. It was argued on
behalf of the plaintiff that a party must be aware of the case he is
to answer to.
[26]
It is common cause that the marriage between
the parties has irretrievably broken down. Both parties seek
the division of
the joint estate, whose assets may or may not include
assets owned by the Trust.
[27]
As alluded to above, in her
plea and counter claim, the defendant alleges that the plaintiff was
secretive about the assets of the
joint estate and the Trust and that
he was in total control of the Trust and had abused the trust form in
that it was difficult
to ascertain assets owned by the joint estate
and those owned by the Trust. In an endeavour to solicit
information about
the extent and nature of the joint estate, the
defendant’s counsel submitted that it was necessary for the
plaintiff to elicit
information about the affairs of the Trust in
order for a proper determination to be made of the value of the joint
estate and
to achieve an equitable division of the assets of
the joint estate after the marriage between the parties is ended.
Hence the prayer by the defendant to seek the appointment of a
receiver. It is the defendant’s contention that the
Trust
is the plaintiff’s
alter
ego
.
[28]
Section 12 of the Trust Property Control Act 57
of 1988 provides that trust property shall not form part of the
personal estate
of the trustee except insofar as he or she, as the
beneficiary, is entitled to the trust property.
[29]
In
P A F v S C
F
2022 (6) SA 162
(SCA) the court
held that:
“
[36]
Accordingly, where there is an allegation that one of the spouses had
sought to evade this
obligation by abusing the trust form, for
example, by transferring assets to a trust in order to reduce the
value of their estate,
and thus their accrual liability,
a
court is not precluded from enquiring into that issue. It is
empowered to
conduct
an in-depth examination of the facts to determine
whether
trust form had been abused. If this is established in that factual
enquiry, the court is empowered to
pierce
the trust veneer, and order that the value of such assets be taken
into account in the calculation of the accrual. This power
is not
based on the authority of the MPA or in the exercise of a statutory
discretion, but on the basis that a factual enquiry
has revealed
trust form abuse, upon which the piercing of the trust veneer
follows.
…
[44]
In other words, the absence of ‘control’ does not
necessarily exclude
the possibility of trust form abuse. A court must
vigilantly examine the facts in each case to determine allegations of
trust form
abuse. If such abuse is established, a court is entitled
to pierce the trust veneer, despite the absence of ‘control’.
As explained in
Van Zyl NO v Kaye NO
para
22, piercing the trust veneer is:
‘
.
. . [A]n equitable remedy . . . one that lends itself to a flexible
approach to fairly and justly address the consequences of
an
unconscionable abuse of the trust form in given circumstances. It is
a remedy that will generally be given when the trust form
is used in
a dishonest or unconscionable manner to evade a liability, or avoid
an obligation.’”
[30]
In
R P v D P and
Others
2014 (6) SA 243
(ECP) the court
stated the following:
“
[36]
In
marriages in community of property, piercing the trust veil refers to
a court’s ability to disregard a trust’s separate
legal
identity during a divorce to ensure an equitable division of marital
assets, particularly when a trust is used to shield
assets from the
joint estate. This action is taken when a trust is deemed to be
a sham or is being abused to avoid equitable
distribution of
property.”
[31]
Furthermore, in
R
P v D P (supra)
the
court held that:
“
[24]
… where the trust form is abused and the trustee treats
the trust as his or
her alter ego…, then the court pierces the
trust veil and enquires into the separateness of the trust assets
from the personal
assets of the trustee or founder. In this
sense ‘piercing the veil’ is simply an exercise by the
court of looking
behind the transaction to decide whether or not the
separateness of trust assets was simulated to hide the personal
assets of the
trustee. No order or declaratory is needed to
pierce the veil – it is done by virtue of the evidence placed
before
the court.
[25]
In order decide (sic) whether particular property constitutes true
trust- property
or whether in reality and truth it falls within the
personal estate of the trustee, the court will have regard to, inter
alia,
the terms of the trust deed, the extent of the de facto control
of the trustee over trust affairs and assets, the nature of the
assets, the liabilities of the trust, and the management of the
affairs of the trust. Each case will be decided on its own
particular facts. And the veil is pierced or lifted only in respect
of those assets under consideration in the case. In all
other
respects the separation of trust assets and assets in the personal
estate of the trustee is kept intact.”
[32]
The relief sought by the defendant is the
division of the joint estate which can only be properly done if the
true extent and nature
of its asses is ascertained. I do not
understand the defendant’s counsel’s line of questioning
being to seek
to invalidate the transactions referred to during cross
examination. What the defendant seeks is for an investigation to be
conducted
as to which assets belong to the joint estate and if
anything else is connected to the Trust which if proven to belong
exclusively
to the Trust, will not be included in the joint estate,
bearing in mind that the Trust assets belong to the trustees.
[33]
In order to determine
whether a third party should have been joined in proceedings, the
question is whether the party sought to
be joined has a direct and
substantial legal interest in the order the court may make. At
this stage, the defendant only
seeks the appointment of a receiver to
investigate the assets of the joint estate.
The
defendant does not dispute the establishment or validity of the trust
but only seeks to have assets that belong to the joint
estate
identified. For purposes of determining the separate assets of
the joint estate and of the Trust, I am of the view
that it is not
necessary to cite or join the Trust and its related businesses in
these proceedings.
[34]
With regard to the
plaintiff’s assertion that the
not
refer to any third party, the Trust or that the plaintiff was abusing
the Trust form, as correctly pointed out by counsel for
the
defendant, the relevance of the Trust to these proceedings was
apparent taking into account that the defendant alleges that
the
plaintiff is in de facto control of the Trust and seeks the
appointment of a receiver to establish the assets which should
in
actual fact form part of the joint estate. The fact that the
trust was not expressely referred to or that it is the alter
ego of
the plaintiff does not stop this court from inquirying into the
issues raised and evidence was led on those issues.
In
P
A F
(supra) at para. 30 of
that judgment, the court held that even if an issue was not pleaded
but evidence pertaining to that issue
was ventilated, the court can
still make a determination on that issue. Nothing bars the
defendant from eliciting evidence
relating to the Trust and its
related businesses if such evidence is sought to proof the
defendant’s actual control of the
Trust, which could show that
certain assets of the Trust are actually held by the plaintiff and
therefore form part of the joint
estate. Further I am not
convinced that the questions relating to the entities owned by the
trust are aimed at challenging
decision, for instance in the Astfin
matter, already made by a court.
[35]
Taking into account the evidence led thus far
in these proceedings, argument by counsel and the issues pertaining
to the prayer
sought by both parties for the division of the joint
estate, I am of the view that the questions posed or to be posed to
the plaintiff
relating to the Trust and its associated businesses are
admissible.
[36]
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The Plaintiff’s objections to questions raised by the Defendant
relating to the V[...] family Trust and is associated businesses are
dismissed.
2.
Costs to be costs in the cause.
NP
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge
of the High Court
Date
of hearing : 03 December 2024
Date
of judgment : 11 August 2025
Appearances
For
Plaintiff: Adv S M Stadler (Instructed by Adams & Adams)
For
Defendant: Adv J L khan (Instructed by Erasmus Motaung Inc.)
[1]
2006
(2) SA 255 (SCA).
[2]
2022(6)
SA 162 (SCA).
[3]
2022
(6) SA 162
(SCA).
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