Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 304South Africa
Mlate N.O v Sithole and Another (2023/115917) [2024] ZAGPPHC 304 (27 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 March 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 304
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mlate N.O v Sithole and Another (2023/115917) [2024] ZAGPPHC 304 (27 March 2024)
Mlate N.O v Sithole and Another (2023/115917) [2024] ZAGPPHC 304 (27 March 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_304.html
sino date 27 March 2024
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)
Case
Number: 2023/115917
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
27 March 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
LEBOHANG
EDWIN MLATE NO
Applicant
ID
NO: 9[...]
(In
his capacity as executor in the
estate
late of Kedibone Steve Mlate)
and
METJA
SANDRA SITHOLE
1
st
Respondent
ID
NO: 7[...]
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
2
nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN J
1.
The applicant is Lebohang Edwin Mlate NO,
the executor of the estate of his late father, the deceased. The
applicant has approached
this court urgently in order to obtain an
interim interdict restraining the pay-out of the deceased’s
pension by the second
respondent, the Government Employees Pension
Fund (GEPF).
2.
The first respondent is Metja Sandra
Sithole, who says she is the surviving spouse of the deceased.
The first respondent is,
in context of the estate administration, in
dispute with the applicant about her status as a surviving spouse,
and there are application
proceedings pending in this court in that
regard (the main application). In the main application, the
first respondent seeks
four substantive orders: a) a declarator
that her customary marriage with the deceased be recognised as a
marriage in community
of property under the Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act 120 of 1998 (the Recognition Act); b) an order that
Home Affairs registers
the marriage posthumously; c) an order that
the Master of the High Court not prejudice the interests of the
applicant in her ability
to claim from the deceased estate; and d) an
order that the Master remove the applicant from his position as
executor and appoint
the first respondent as executrix. There
is also a counter-application pending in which the applicant seeks a
declarator
that the deceased’s last Will dated 19 November 2013
be declared his last will and testament. The Will is not
initialled on each page: thus the counter-claim. However,
in that document, the testator purports to distribute his
pension
fund as between his son, the applicant, (70%) and daughter, a Marlene
Stephanie Mlate (30%).
3.
I am satisfied that the application is
urgent as it appears likely on the papers that there is an imminent
payout of the pension
fund. Furthermore, the applicant
has attempted to obtain redress directly with the GEPF but this has
not yielded any
success and he was in fact informed that he should
approach a Court should he want to stop payment of the pension.
It is
understood that GEPF intends to pay out the pension benefit in
part to the first respondent (60%), in part to the applicant (20%)
with the remaining portion (20%) being paid to his sibling. The
relief sought is to restrain the payout pending the finalisation
of
the application and counter-application referred to above.
4.
A
pension benefit does not ordinarily form part of a deceased
estate.
[1]
The GEPF
is, however, subject to the Government Employees Pension Law No 21 of
1996 (the GEP Law) and the Rules made
in Proclamation 21 of 19 April
1996 (the GEP Rules). While under that legislation there are
residual cases where the benefits
may fall to the deceased estate,
that is not the default position, which rather entails the exercise
of discretion by the GEPF
subject to the GEP Law and the GEP rules.
There is no suggestion on the facts before me that this is such
a residual case.
5.
The
GEP Law makes provision for the benefits on death, and makes it clear
that they are not to be treated as property for purposes
of estate
duty.
[2]
6.
Section 22 regulates payments of gratuities
payable on death and provides:
‘
22. Payment
of gratuity to beneficiaries designated by member.
(1) If
a gratuity is payable on the death of any member to the dependants of
such a member or to his or her estate, that
member may, on the
applicable form of the Fund and subject to the prescribed conditions,
notify the Board of his or her wish that
the said gratuity be paid on
his or her death to the beneficiaries mentioned in that form and be
divided among such beneficiaries
in the proportion mentioned in that
form.
(2) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law contained, the Board may on the
death of a member who so notified
the Board pay at its discretion the
gratuity concerned in accordance with the member’s wish’.
7.
A
“beneficiary” is defined in the GEP Law to mean
‘
the
dependant or nominee of a member or pensioner, as the case may be;’.
A dependant, is defined, ‘in relation
to a member of
pensioner’, to mean:
(
a
)
any person in respect of whom the member or pensioner is legally
liable for maintenance;
(
b
)
any person in respect of whom the member or pensioner is not legally
liable for maintenance, if such a person—
(i)
was, in the opinion of the Board at the
time of the death of the member or pensioner in fact dependent upon
such member or pensioner
for maintenance;
(ii)
is the spouse of the member or pensioner, including a party to a
customary union according to indigenous law and custom, or
to a union
recognised as a marriage under the tenets of any religion; or
(c)
a posthumous child of the member or
pensioner; and
(d)
a person in respect of whom the member
or pensioner would have been legally liable for maintenance had that
person been a minor;
8.
Rules
14.5 and 14.6 make detailed provisions for how the GEPF must
distribute benefits on the death of a member and how to distribute
benefits on the death of a pensioner.
[3]
The Courts have, furthermore, given consideration on several
occasions to the scope and contours of the GEPF’s discretion
to
distribute the benefits, which is subject to judicial review.
[4]
9.
It is, moreover, apparent that there is an
Ombud available to determine disputes that may arise regarding the
distribution, and
the review remedy is available to an aggrieved
interested party.
10.
Once this legal framework is appreciated,
it becomes apparent that there are material difficulties with this
application.
11.
The first is that the applicant has
approached the Court as the executor of the deceased’s estate.
In this regard, he appears
to be labouring under a mistaken belief
that he has a formal role in respect of the distribution of the
pension in his capacity
as the executor of the estate. That is
not his role. It is for the trustees of the GEPF to distribute
the pension fund
in accordance with its governing statute and rules.
Indeed, the primary interest that the applicant has is not in
his capacity
as an executor but in his capacity as a beneficiary of
the pension. This is not to say that there are no
circumstances
where an executor may have standing in a case of that
sort but that case is not made out here. Nor is it to say that
the
GEPF may not be obliged to duly afford the applicant
audi
alteram partem
before determining the
pension distribution, either as executor (who is privy to relevant
information) or as a beneficiary, but
that too is not the case made
out.
12.
A second, related difficulty, is that the
interim relief that the applicant seeks would suspend payment of the
pension pending the
resolution of proceedings which are not directly
concerned with who is entitled to benefit from the pension and to
which the GEPF
is not a party. The counter-claim has no bearing
on the question of who is entitled to benefit from the pension fund.
It may be relevant to the GEPF to know that there is a will, possibly
a valid one (though that is
sub judice
),
that purported to distribute the pension fund on death in a
particular way, but even if that will is valid, the decision as to
how to distribute the benefit is for the GEPF to make in accordance
with its governing laws. The main application is similarly
focused on estate administration and concerns, at least centrally,
the dispute in that context between the applicant and the first
respondent. Nonetheless, determination of the first substantive
prayer – concerning the validity of the customary marriage
–
would determine that dispute as between the applicant and the first
respondent and the other parties to that litigation.
It
would not, however, bind GEPF, which is not a party and which
presumably has its own systems and procedures for verifying marriages
and where they are not valid, determining dependancy.
13.
Thirdly, even discounting the above
difficulties, the applicant faces a serious difficulty in that he has
satisfactory alternative
remedies in the form of the Ombud – to
the extent available – and review. Both of these remedies
can, if asserted,
redress any harm to an applicant of an unlawful
payout if made.
14.
In submissions addressed after the hearing,
the applicant implored the Court to grant interim redress pending the
determination
of any dispute with the Ombud or on review. It
would not be fair for me to entertain that relief on the papers
before me,
as it was not sought. Neither the GEPF nor the first
respondent had due notice and neither have had an opportunity to
respond
to that case.
15.
Indeed, there is no clarity whether a
decision has already been taken by GEPF. If it has not, it may
be that to act lawfully,
fairly and rationally, the GEPF should take
further steps to duly hear the applicant further but I cannot
determine that fairly
on the papers before me. Moreover, if
GEPF has taken its decision and cannot revisit it, then it is
encumbent upon GEPF duly
to notify the interested parties so that
they can exercise any rights they may wish to either on review, with
the Ombud or otherwise.
In this regard, the only fair order I
can make is to direct the applicants to deliver a copy of this order
to GEPF with a request
that GEPF duly consider the issues raised with
reference to the papers that were served on GEPF.
16.
On costs, I must conclude that they should
follow the result and, as submitted by the first respondent, should
not burden the estate.
The first respondent has been put to
significant costs responding to a misconceived case in circumstances
where he should have
approached the Court in a different capacity.
17.
I make the following order:
17.1.
The application is heard as one of urgency
and the Court dispenses with the periods, manner of service and
practice directives in
terms of Rule 6(12) and the practice manual;
17.2.
The application is dismissed with costs on
a party and party scale.
17.3.
The applicant is directed to deliver a copy
of this judgment to the GEPF to enable it to consider the issues
raised.
SJ Cowen
Judge, High Court,
Pretoria
Date of hearing: 20
March 2024
Date of judgment: 27
March 2024
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv
W Botes
instructed by Shapiro &
Ledwaba Attorneys
First
respondent:
Adv
K Mpenyama instructed by ML Malatji Attorneys
[1]
Under
the Pension Fund Act 1956 (specifically section 37A), a pension
benefit does not form part of the assets of a deceased estate.
See generally, Hunter et al, The Pension Funds Act: A
Commentary on the Act, regulations, selected notices, directives
and
circulars, at p 682-3. The GEPF is governed by its own set of
laws.
[2]
Section 28 which provides:
‘
Benefits
not property for purposes of estate duty.
—Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law contained, any benefit or any
right to a benefit, due and payable in
terms of this Law to the
beneficiary of a member, on or as a result of or after the death of
that member shall for the purposes
of the Estate Duty Act, 1955 (Act
No. 45 of 1955), be deemed not to be property as defined in section
3 (2) of that
Act.’
[3]
I
do not repeat these provisions simply due to their length but they
must be considered by those involved in this dispute.
[4]
No
argument has been provided on this issue but even a cursory
considerations of the data-bases show that there are many cases
to
hand. See eg.
Rousseau
and others v GEPF and others,
[2022] ZAFSHC 285
to which the applicant’s counsel drew my
attention, and the cases referred to in that case.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Matlhwana v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (051162/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 445 (15 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 445High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
N.M.M v Chabalala N.O and Others (2022-021286) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1259 (2 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1259High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Motlana v Msibi N.O and Another (38673/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 515 (4 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 515High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mthembu v Ntsako and Others (2024-021190) [2024] ZAGPPHC 259 (25 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 259High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
N.N v S.M.A (093796/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 504 (24 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 504High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar