Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 299South Africa
Du Preez and Others v Master of the High Court and Others (45184/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 299 (26 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Du Preez and Others v Master of the High Court and Others (45184/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 299 (26 February 2024)
Du Preez and Others v Master of the High Court and Others (45184/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 299 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 45184/2021
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED
In
the matter between:
JACOBUS NICOLAAS DU
PREEZ N.O. First
Applicant
WILHELMINA CATHARINA
JACOBA GERICKE Second
Applicant
HILDA MARGARETHA
GERICKE
Third Applicant
and
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
First Respondent
HEINRICH GUNTER
KLOKOUW N.O.
Second Respondent
JANETTA MARIA
GERICKE
Third Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA
AJ:
[1]
This is an application in
terms of section 2A(c) of the Wills Act
[1]
read together with section 8(4A) of the Administration of Estates
Act
[2]
in terms of which the
applicants seek an order declaring that the Late Theuns Johannes
Gericke (“the deceased”) revoked
his last will dated 26
August 2013 when he concluded a divorce settlement agreement that was
converted into a court order by the
Pretoria Regional court on 25 or
31 October 2019.
[2]
The third respondent, the ex-wife of the deceased, opposes this
application , inter alia, on the main ground that the
deceased did
not amend his will within three months after the dissolution of the
marriage as provided for in section 2(b) of the
Wills Act. Section
2(b) of the Wills Act provides that:
“
(b)
no deletion, addition, alteration or interlineation made in a will
executed on or after the said date and made after the
execution
thereof shall be valid unless –
(i)
the deletion, addition, alteration or interlineation is identified by
the signature of the testator or by the signature
of some other
person made in his presence and by his direction; and
(ii)
such signature is made by the testator or by such other person or is
acknowledged by the testator and, if made by such
other person, also
by such other person, in the presence of two or more competent
witnesses present at the same time; and
(iii)
the deletion, addition, alteration or interlineation is further
identified by the signature of such witnesses made in
the presence of
the testator and of each other and, if the deletion, addition,
alteration or interlineation has been identified
by the signature of
such person, in the presence also of such other person; and
(iv)
if the deletion, addition, alteration or interlineation is identified
by the mark of the testator or the signature of
some other person
made in his presence and by his direction, a magistrate, justice of
the peach, commissioner of oaths or notary
public certifies on the
will that the testator is known to him and that he has satisfied
himself that the deletion, addition, alteration
or interlineation has
been made by or at the request of the testator.”
[3]
The first applicant is the executor of the deceased estate who was
appointed by the first respondent, the Master of the
High Court,
Pretoria (“the Master”) at the instance of the second
applicant, the biological mother of the deceased
and the third
applicant who is the sister of the deceased.
[4]
The second respondent is an interested party and a nominated executor
in terms of the deceased’s last will.
[5]
The background facts are
common cause and are briefly as follows:
[3]
5.1 The deceased
executed his will on 26 August 2013 and approximately a year
later on 11 October 2014, he and
his ex-wife concluded an
antenuptial contract with accrual (“the ANC”). In terms
of the ANC the parties agreed to exclude
the immovable property of
the deceased situated at 8[…] R[…] Street, B[…],
Pretoria, Gauteng (“the immovable
property”) from the
accrual system.
5.2 On or about 3
October 2019, the ex-wife instituted divorce proceedings in the
Pretoria Regional court and on 7 October
2019 the parties
concluded a divorce settlement agreement which was made an order of
court on 25 October 2019 but was stamped
on 31 October
2019.
- The main dispute
between the parties centres around the part of the divorce
settlement agreement and the court order relating
to the immovable
property which was excluded from the accrual system in the ANC. The
relevant clauses of the settlement agreement
are -
The main dispute
between the parties centres around the part of the divorce
settlement agreement and the court order relating
to the immovable
property which was excluded from the accrual system in the ANC. The
relevant clauses of the settlement agreement
are -
5.3.1 Clause 2:
immovable [property]
The parties record that:
“
The defendant
is the registered owner of immovable property situated at 8[…]
R[…] Street, B[…], Pretoria, Gauteng
subject to a
mortgage bond in favour of Standard Bank. The plaintiff will have no
claim in respect of the immovable property and
the defendant will
stay the sole and exclusive owner thereof.”
5.3.2 Clause 7
Entire Agreement:
“
This is the
entire agreement between the parties and the parties shall have no
claim against each other arising from the marriage,
except for the
claims contained in this agreement. No amendments of this agreement
shall be of any effect unless reduced to writing
and signed by both
Parties.”
5.3.3 Clause 8
Court Order
“
This agreement
shall be incorporated in a Divorce Order and shall form part of the
Divorce Order should it please the Court to make
such order. This
agreement will be binding on both parties’ heirs, executors,
administrators or assign.”
[6]
The deceased’s will reads as follows:
“
Ek
bemaak my boedel aan JANETTA FERREIRA (gebore 1973/01/15). Indien
Janetta Ferreira my nie oorleef nie, dan bemaak ek my boedel
aan my
ma, INA GERICKE. Indien enige van my erfgename my nie oorleef nie,
dan aan sy/haar afstammelinge by wyse van plaasvervulling
en by
gebreke aan afstammelinge, dan aan die oorblywende erfgename.”
[7]
Unfortunately on 5 May 2020, the deceased shot himself and
subsequently succumbed to his injuries on 20 October 2020.
[8]
In my view there are two
issues that arise for determination. The first is whether the will of
the deceased conflicts with the divorce
settlement agreement which
was converted into an order of court
[4]
and if the answer is in the affirmative the deceased must be deemed
to have revoked his last will as contemplated by Section 2A(c)
of the
Wills Act when he concluded the settlement agreement with his
ex-wife.
[9]
The second and final question is what was the intention of the court
when it converted the settlement agreement into an
order of court.
[10]
Section 2A(c) provides as follows:
“
Power
of Court to declare a will to be revoked if a Court is satisfied that
a testator has drafted another document or before his
death caused
such document to be drafted, by which he intended to revoke his will
or part of his will, the Court shall declare
the will or the part
concerned, as the case may be, to be revoked.”
[11]
Section 8(4A) of the Administration of Estates Act provides that:
“
In
taking a decision concerning the acceptance of a will for the
purposes of this Act, the Master shall take into account the
revocation
of a later will, but not the common law presumptions
concerning the revocation of a will.”
[12]
The first applicant
asserted that he was appointed at the instance of the mother and
sister of the deceased on the premise that
the deceased had no
[5]
will. All three applicants submit that it is important to take into
account the fact that the deceased and his ex-wife were married
out
of community of property with the accrual system and that the
immovable property was “pertinently” excluded from
the
accrual in terms of the antenuptial agreement.
[13]
The applicants submit that the court should grant an order that the
will of the deceased was revoked in light of the
terms of the
antenuptial agreement read together with the settlement agreement
which was made an order of court.
[14]
In other words, the submission by the applicants is that the
interpretation of the settlement agreement must take into
account the
terms of the ANC in that the ANC vested the ownership of the
immovable property in the deceased and that the divorce
settlement
agreement specifically retained the immovable property in the sole
ownership of the deceased.
[15]
Both the Master and the second respondent do not oppose the relief
that the applicants are seeking. In fact, the second
respondent has
filed a notice to abide the decision of this court. Accordingly, it
is only the third respondent in her capacity
as the ex-wife of the
deceased who is opposing the relief that the applicants are seeking.
[16]
The third respondent opposes the relief on five grounds:
- the first is that the
deceased was aware that his last will was in the possession of the
second respondent and if he had the
intention to revoke it, he
would have contacted the second respondent or the ex-wife or would
have made a prior note before
shooting himself;
the first is that the
deceased was aware that his last will was in the possession of the
second respondent and if he had the
intention to revoke it, he
would have contacted the second respondent or the ex-wife or would
have made a prior note before
shooting himself;
- the second is that the
exclusion of the immovable property in the registered antenuptial
contract cannot be construed to mean
that the deceased did not
intend to bequeath his assets to her after his death;
the second is that the
exclusion of the immovable property in the registered antenuptial
contract cannot be construed to mean
that the deceased did not
intend to bequeath his assets to her after his death;
- the third is that the
exclusion of the immovable property from the accrual system dealt
with the assets whilst the deceased
was still alive. The ex-wife
asserts that both the antenuptial contract and the settlement
agreement were documents which regulated
the assets of the deceased
whilst the deceased was still alive and that the only document that
regulated the assets of the
deceased in the event of his death was
his will;
the third is that the
exclusion of the immovable property from the accrual system dealt
with the assets whilst the deceased
was still alive. The ex-wife
asserts that both the antenuptial contract and the settlement
agreement were documents which regulated
the assets of the deceased
whilst the deceased was still alive and that the only document that
regulated the assets of the
deceased in the event of his death was
his will;
- The fourth is that the
reference in the settlement agreement to the effect that the
agreement will be binding on both parties’
heirs, executors,
administrators or assign, does not mean that the ex-wife is
excluded from being an heir to the estate. It
merely means that if
an asset would have been transferred in terms of the settlement
agreement, such a transfer would be binding
on the deceased and the
ex-wife’s respective estates; and
The fourth is that the
reference in the settlement agreement to the effect that the
agreement will be binding on both parties’
heirs, executors,
administrators or assign, does not mean that the ex-wife is
excluded from being an heir to the estate. It
merely means that if
an asset would have been transferred in terms of the settlement
agreement, such a transfer would be binding
on the deceased and the
ex-wife’s respective estates; and
16.5
The fifth is the reliance
on section 2B of the Wills Act in that the deceased had failed to
make a new will three
[6]
months
after the divorce and consequently, the ex-wife contends that she is
entitled to inherit in terms of the will.
The
law dealing with settlement agreements which are made an order of
court
[17]
The practice of making a
settlement agreement an order of court is encouraged and
well-established and has existed
[7]
for a long time in South African law.
[18]
It is also equally
acceptable
[8]
to take the terms
of a settlement agreement and convert them into a court’s
imprimatur. In converting a settlement agreement
into an order of
court, a court would be mindful that the settlement agreement is
elevated to a court order and is enforceable,
just like any
[9]
other order issued by a court.
[19]
Since a settlement agreement that has been made an order of court is
equivalent to any order of court, it is not surprising
that it is
generally interpreted like any other court order. In this regard, the
following dictum is relevant:
“
The
starting point
[10]
is to determine the
manifest purpose of the order. In interpreting a judgment or order,
the court’s intention is to be ascertained
from the language of
the judgment or order in accordance with the usual well-known rules
relating to the interpretation of documents.
As in the case of a
document, the judgment or order and the court’s reasons for
giving it must be read as a whole in order
to ascertain its
intention.”
[20]
Turning to the present
matter, it is evident from the decree of divorce that the court heard
viva
voce
evidence
prior to making the settlement agreement an order of court. Moreover,
the court made the settlement agreement an order
of court in the
context of a divorce – which dissolved
[11]
the bonds of marriage between the deceased and his ex-wife.
[21]
The will bequeaths the
entire estate of the deceased to his ex-wife. On the other hand, the
settlement agreement is unambiguous
that the ex-wife “
will
have no claim in respect of the immovable property and that the
defendant will stay the sole owner and exclusive owner thereof”
.
[12]
Interpretation
of the agreement
[22]
It is by now trite that
the interpretation of the agreement between the parties which was
elevated into a court order is a question
of law. The law pertaining
to the interpretation of a document has been aptly stated by Wallis J
in
Natal
Joint Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[13]
at para 18, as follows:
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must
be given to
the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production. Where more than one
meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective not subjective.
A sensible meaning
is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the document. Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or businesslike for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and
legislation. In a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact
made. The ‘inevitable
point of departure is the language of the provision itself’,
read in context and having regard
to the purpose of the provision and
the background to the preparation and production of the document.”
[23]
It follows therefore that as a starting point, the contents of the
settlement agreement should be considered having regard
to the
context provided by reading all the paragraphs of the settlement
agreement and not only the quoted ones as well as the circumstances
attendant upon its coming to existence.
[24]
In this regard it is crucial to appreciate that it was the ex-wife
that initiated the divorce and the rationale basis
for the settlement
agreement was to ensure a clean break with the ex-wife by dividing
the assets between the parties.
[25]
This view is borne by the facts concomitant with the language used,
the context and the apparent purpose for which the
settlement
agreement was concluded.
[26]
There is therefore little doubt in my mind that the settlement
agreement is in conflict with the will in respect of the
ownership of
the immovable property. It is evident from reading the two documents
that the deceased bequeathed the immovable property
to the ex-wife in
terms of the will and retains the very same property in accordance
with the settlement agreement. Hence the conflict
between the two
documents.
[27]
This entail that the
deceased must have intended to revoke his will by concluding the
settlement agreement if the interpretations
cannons referred to are
taken into account. This is clear from the strong language used in
the settlement agreement which provides
that “ the plaintiff
(ex-wife) will have no claim in respect of the immovable property and
the defendant (the deceased) will
stay the sole and exclusive owner
thereof”
[14]
[28]
In addition, the context
in terms of which the settlement agreement was concluded is that the
deceased and his ex-wife wanted the
settlement agreement to be made
an order of court and to bind their executors
[15]
.
This would entail that the settlement agreement is the living
document that would regulate the division of the parties’
s
assets even after they have passed on.
[29]
I now turn to deal with the major grounds upon which the ex-wife
opposes the relief that the applicants are seeking.
In view of the
approach that I adopt, it is not necessary to deal exhaustively with
all the grounds of opposition that the ex-wife
raises.
[30]
To reiterate, the first ground is that the deceased was aware that
his will was in the possession of the second defendant
and if he had
the intention to revoke it, he would have done so by contacting the
second respondent or his ex-wife.
[31]
This submission is misguided. The question is whether the deceased
had drafted another document or caused another document
to be
drafted, prior to his death which is on the face of it constitutes a
revocation of his last will.
[32]
It may have been true that the deceased knew that his last will was
in the possession of the second respondent as the
nominated executor,
but it is common cause that the deceased did not go to the second
respondent to amend his will nor did he draft
a new will before he
passed away.
[33]
The intention of the Regional court in converting the settlement
agreement into an order of court is apparent. It was
to end the bond
of marriage and to regulate the dissolution of the marital estate
following the dissolution of the marriage.
[34]
On the ex-wife’s own version “
the deceased negotiated
the terms of the settlement agreement”
and it must
therefore be inferred that the deceased meant to be unequivocally
clear about the ownership of the assets – particularly
the
immovable property.
[35]
The conclusion is irresistible that viewed cumulatively, the terms of
the settlement agreement leads to one conclusion
only and that is
that the deceased must therefore be taken to have revoked his will in
accordance with section 2A(c) of the Wills
Act.
[36]
I am also in agreement with the applicants’ submission that the
fact that the immovable property had been excluded
in terms of the
antenuptial agreement assist in interpreting the settlement
agreement. Such a factor assist with the context of
the of the whole
scenario prior to the conclusion of the settlement agreement.
[37]
The words sued in the settlement agreement to the effect that the
deceased “ will stay the sole owner support the
interpretation
that the deceased wanted to retain ownership of the immovable
property during his life time during the subsistence
of the marriage
as well as after the divorce.
[38]
The other ground relied on by the ex-wife is that the exclusion of
the immovable property from the accrual system dealt
with the assets,
whilst the deceased was still alive and that the will was the only
document that regulated the deceased’s
assets in the event of
his death.
[39]
This interpretation is not supported by the wording of the settlement
agreement. For example the settlement agreement
provides that the
ex-wife and the deceased’s executors would be bound by it.
[40]
It is trite that one can only have an executor to administer one ‘s
own estate once one is dead. The use of the
word “
executor”
in the settlement agreement points to the deceased ‘s intention
to revoke his will and to regulate his assets during his
lifetime
commencing immediately after the divorce and after his death.
Accordingly, the ex-wife’s submission in this regard
is not
sustainable.
[41]
For the sake of completion, I now deal with the last ground of
opposition that is worthy of consideration, which is a
reliance on
section 2B of the Wills Act to the effect that the failure to make a
new will or to amend the existing will three months
after the divorce
renders the ex-wife entitled to inherit in terms of the will. This
submission would have been sustainable had
the parties not concluded
and signed the settlement agreement.
[42]
The settlement agreement effectively amended the will by divesting
the ex-wife of the immovable property and vesting
it in the sole
ownership of the deceased and thereby placing the settlement
agreement within the purview of section 2A(c) of the
Wills Act.
[43]
The above conclusion is dispositive of the ex-wife’s
grounds of opposition to the relief that the applicants are
seeking
and renders it unnecessary to consider the ex-wife ‘s other
grounds upon which she opposes the relief in question.
[44]
For all the reasons outlined in the preceding paragraphs, the
ex-wife’s grounds for opposing the relief that the
applicants
seek fall to be rejected as meritless.
[45]
In respect of costs, it is trite that costs are within a court’s
discretion which must be exercised judicially.
In my view, there is
nothing that militates against the rule that costs should follow the
result in this case, accordingly, I award
costs in favour of the
applicants on an party and party scale.
Order
[46]
In the result, the following order is made:
1. The deceased is
declared to have revoked his last will dated 26 August 2013 by
causing the settlement agreement to
be drafted, signed and converted
into a court order by the Pretoria Regional court on 25 or 31 October
2019.
R B MKHABELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
26 March 2024
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS: M
J Kleyn
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Bernardine Follet Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THIRD RESPONDENT: R
C D Avery
INSTRUCTED
BY: Austy
Incorporated
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 22
August 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
26 March 2024
[1]
Wills Act, 7 of 1953
.
[2]
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
.
[3]
The founding affidavit is unfortunately sparse and it
appears that there is no replying affidavit.
[4]
According to the final decree of divorce granted by
Magistrate A C Bekker dated 25 October 2019, the ex-wife
is
reflected as the plaintiff and the deceased as the defendant. This
means that it was the ex – wife who instituted the
divorce
proceedings.
[5]
Although there is a tentative attack on the validity of
the will, the applicants are not seeking any relief to set
aside the
will. I will therefore assume that the validity of the will is not
an issue before me in these proceedings.
[6]
It is correct that the section deals with the
disinheritance of a surviving spouse within three months of divorce.
Section 2B
of the
Wills Act allows
for that.
[7]
Eke
v Parsons
2016
(3) SA 37
(CC) at para 8, read with para 23.
[8]
Eke
supra
at para 14.
[9]
Eke
supra
at para 29 read with para 53.
[10]
Finishing
Touch 163 (Pty) Ltd v BHP Billiton Energy Coal, South Africa Ltd &
Others
2013
(2) SA 204
(SCA) (“
Finishing
Touch 163)
at
para 13 – this approach was subsequently endorsed by the
Constitutional Court in
Eke
.
[11]
This is clear from the terms of divorce decree.
[12]
Clause 3 of the settlement agreement.
[13]
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA).
[14]
Clause
2 of the settlement agreement.
[15]
Clause 8 of the settlement agreement.
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