Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 523South Africa
L.L v A.J.M and Others (014357/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 523; 2025 (1) SA 455 (GP) (7 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## L.L v A.J.M and Others (014357/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 523; 2025 (1) SA 455 (GP) (7 June 2024)
L.L v A.J.M and Others (014357/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 523; 2025 (1) SA 455 (GP) (7 June 2024)
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sino date 7 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Maintenance –
Deceased
estate
–
Defendants
excepted to particulars of claim – Defendants require
plaintiff to prove that she is unable to maintain and
educate
minor children – Obligation to support minor child extends
to deceased estate – Failure to plead facta
probantia does
not render pleading bad in law – On every construction of
particulars defendants are able to plead as
pleading shows
defendants’ case they are called upon to meet –
Exception dismissed.
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 NO: 014357/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
7 June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
L[...]
L[...]
Plaintiff/Respondent
(Identity
No. 7[...])
(In
her capacity as the biological mother of the
minor
children: E[...] O[...] G[...] L[...]
and
J[...] O[...] C[...] L[...])
and
A[...]
J[...] M[...]
(Identity
No. 7[...])
First Defendant/First Excipient
L[...]
S[...] V[...]
Second Defendant/ Second Excipient
(Identity
No. 7[...])
(As
a nominee of Wealth Succession Trustees
and
Executors (Pty) Ltd)
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
Third Defendant
JOHANNESBURG
NEUKIRCHER
J
:
1]
The plaintiff is the
mother of two minor children
[1]
whose father - the deceased - passed away on 18 May 2021. On 13
October 2021, the plaintiff submitted a maintenance claim on behalf
of the two minor children to the defendants who are the appointed
executors of the deceased estate. The claim was supported by
an
Actuarial Report penned by Arch Actuarial Consulting. The actuary has
calculated the childrens’ maintenance as follows:
a)
EOGH = R1 250 299; and
b)
JOGH = R1 399 959.
2]
On 16 October 2021 the defendants informed the plaintiff that
the
maintenance claim was declined. Their reasons were the following:
“
3.1
We have not been provided with answers to our questions as to your
client’s own means of capital
and income to provide for the
maintenance of the minor children. This failure means we cannot
assess whether their mother is able
to maintain them, nor what the
reasonable contribution from her should be.
3.2
Kindly refer to par 3.8 of your actuarial report which also provides
the current legal position
that a claim such as this only arises
where the natural guardian is unable to provide for the children.
This notion finds support
in Meyerowitz 10
th
Ed par 21.31.
See also Ritchken’s Executor vs Ritchken and Goldman vs
Goldman’s Executor referred to by the author
in footnote 7.
This seems to be the current legal position.
3.3
Kindly refer to par 3.7 of your actuarial report which states that
the claim is based on
a notion that the minors will receive no
proceeds from the deceased estate. This is not a correct assumption,
as the testator left
his entire residue to the two children, in
trust.
3.4
Any benefit received by a claimant reduces the claim for maintenance.
As residual heirs,
as the residue is greater than the claim
submitted, any claim, even if successful reduces to zero in such a
case. See also Meyerowitz
10
th
Ed par 21.31 and the case
law he quotes in footnote 12. We do not understand the law to have
changed on this aspect.
3.5
The Testator created a trust in the will to provide for the minor
heirs. Accepting the claim
lodged herein would thwart the wishes of
the Testator. The Testator provided for his children in the manner
provided for in the
will and approving the claim would mean that the
funds provided for would have to be paid into the guardian’s
fund, which
was not the wish of the Testator.”
3]
The first and final
liquidation and distribution account was advertised in the Government
Gazette on 10 December 2021 and the plaintiff
then filed an objection
in terms of s35(7) of the Administration of Deceased Estates Act 66
of 1965
[2]
. In response, the
defendants informed the Master on 20 December 2021 that:
1.
“
The Executors formally rejected the maintenance claim
lodged against the estate, which now forms the basis of the objection
in question,
on 16 October 2021. (“Annexure B”)
2.
The grounds for the rejection of the claim against the estate, as
clearly set out and explained in Annexure B, now constitutes the
Executors’ comments on the objection lodged at your office.
3.
Notwithstanding the various grounds for the rejection of the
maintenance claim against the estate as set out in Annexure B, the
Executors persist that there is no claim for maintenance allowable
where the minors in whose favour the claim is lodged is also
the sole
residual heirs to the estate.”
4]
The plaintiff then re-lodged the maintenance claim with the
defendants on 18 January 2022, but without success.
5]
On 15 August 2022 the plaintiff, in her capacity as the biological
mother, (and sole guardian), of the two minor children instituted the
present action against the defendants for the total amount
of
R2 650 258. The defendants filed an exception to the
particulars of claim on the basis that it did not disclose a
cause of
action. The plaintiff’s subsequent Rule 28 amendment fared no
better as the defendants persisted with the exception
and it was set
down for hearing before me on 6 May 2024.
6]
The parties have agreed that the exception should be adjudicated
based on the amended particulars of claim and the exception filed on
10 October 2022. I take no issue with that practical approach.
THE
PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
7]
The essence of the relevant allegations in the particulars of
claim
is the following:
a)
that the plaintiff institutes action against the defendants
- as
executors of the deceased estate - in her capacity as biological
mother of the two minor children;
b)
that she and the deceased are the biological parents of the
two minor
children;
c)
that the minor children have a claim for maintenance against
the
deceased estate based on the deceased’s common law duty to
maintain the minor children;
d)
that the plaintiff and the deceased estate have a joint duty
of
support;
e)
that “
Given the financial means of LL and the financial
means of the deceased estate, LL and the deceased estate are liable
to maintain
the minor children on the basis that each is liable to
contribute 50% to the maintenance of the minor children.”;
f)
that an actuary has calculated the fair maintenance needs
of the
children as being:
(i)
R1 250 299 for EOGL;
(ii)
R1 399 959 for JOCL;
g)
that the calculations are set out in the actuarial report which
is
attached to the particulars of claim as “PoC2”.
THE
EXCEPTION
8]
The defendants have excepted to the particulars of claim on
the
ground that the averments, as contained in the particulars of claim
and the actuarial report, do not disclose a cause of action.
The
defendants except on the basis that:
a)
the plaintiff has failed to plead that the minor children have
no
assets sufficient for their support, that their assets are of nil
value and that she has failed to attach any documentary evidence
to
support such an averment;
b)
that the plaintiff had failed to plead that the children will
receive
no benefit from the deceased estate other than their claim for
maintenance;
c)
that the plaintiff failed to attach the last will and
testament to
her particulars of claim to support the averments in the actuarial
report;
d)
the plaintiff has failed to plead that she is unable to maintain
the
minor children;
e)
she has failed to make any averments regarding her own financial
means or append documentary proof.
9]
They plead that the support for the exception is founded on
the
following:
a)
the actuarial report contends “
that the Court should
consider whether the children have an income or assets (perhaps in
the form of benefit from the estate) sufficient
for their support”;
b)
the actuary has accepted the minor childrens’ earning
capacity
and available assets are NIL;
c)
the actuary “notes” that the children will receive
no
proceeds from the deceased estate other than the claim for
maintenance;
d)
the actuary has assumed that the plaintiff and the deceased
shared a
maintenance obligation and states “
although case law infers
that a claim on the estate only arises to the extent that the
surviving parent is unable to maintain the
children.
”
RULE
23 EXCEPTIONS
10]
I emphasize that this exception is not based on the particulars of
claim being
vague and embarrassing - it is based on it failing to
disclose a cause of action. I mention this because at the conclusion
of her
argument in reply Ms Howard submitted that should I not be
with her on the cause of action argument, the pleading is in any
event
vague and embarrassing. But this argument cannot be
entertained:
a)
firstly, the exception is not based on that ground;
b)
secondly, the plaintiff has been called to respond to a specific
set
of facts and the entire argument is based on that;
c)
thirdly, to change argument at the dying gasp amounts to little
more
than a so-called: “trial by ambush”;
d)
lastly, the requirements
for the 2 bases of exception are not the same: whereas an exception
that a pleading is vague and embarrassing
strikes at the formulation
of the cause of action; whether it fails to disclose a cause of
action goes to the heart of its validity.
[3]
11]
Importantly, vis-à-vis the ground of vague and embarrassing,
it has been held in
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Boksburg Traditional Council
[4]
,
that it is sufficient if a defendant knows ‘adequately’
what a plaintiff’s case is or ‘sufficiently’
shows
the defendant the case which he is called upon to meet
[5]
.
12]
Insofar as a “
bad
in law exception”
is
concerned, the excipient must show that on any construction of the
pleadings, the claim is excipiable
[6]
.
In
Trope
v SA Reserve Bank and Another
[7]
,
McCreath J stated that:
“
(p)leadings
must … be lucid and logical and in an intelligible form; the
cause of action or defence must appear clearly from
the factual
allegations made.”
13]
It is for this reason that the particulars of claim must be viewed as
they stand and a court
must assume the correctness of the factual
averments made, unless they are palpably untrue or so improbable that
they cannot be
accepted
[8]
.
THE
LEGAL POSITION
14]
It does not appear that the defendants deny that an obligation rests
upon the deceased estate
to maintain the minor
[9]
children. This finds support in several decisions dating back to
1924:
a)
In
Ritchken’s
Executors v Ritchken
[10]
,
a testator bequeathed 75% of his estate to his minor son, but
directed that should he reside with his mother,
[11]
he would forfeit all rights to the bequest. In finding that this
provision is void, the court stated:
“…
It is
true that under our law it is open to everyone freely to dispose of
his property by will without any regard to his offspring,
but,
nevertheless, the maintenance and education of his minor children
after his death, provided the surviving spouse is unable
to maintain
and educate them, is an obligation due by the estate, a debt resting
on the estate, which, like all other debts, must
be discharged before
a legacy devised by the will of the deceased can be paid out.”
b)
In
Goldman
NO v Executor Estate Goldman
[12]
,
the court stated:
“
The estate of
a deceased father is always liable for
the
maintenance of a minor child, and it is a debt
resting
on the estate which must be satisfied before any payments
of legacies are made … And there seems to me
to be no reason
why the same responsibility should not be placed on the estate of
a deceased mother…
As the applicant is unable to
provide adequately for his children their mother's estate is
legally bound to assist in
their maintenance…”
c)
In
Van
Zyl v Serfontein
[13]
,
Foxcroft J stated:
“
It is also now
well established that the right to maintenance does not arise out of
any principle of inheritance but out of the
family
relationship
between parent and child. As is pointed out by Spiro in his work, The
Law of Parent and Child 4th ed at 390, Voet was
of the
opinion that the duty of maintenance terminated with the death of the
parent, but a mistaken reading of Groenewegen has
prevailed. On the strength of Carelse v Estate De Vries
(1906)
23 SC 532
, In
re Visser
1948 (3) SA 1129
(C)
and many subsequent cases, the position appears to be that the duty
of a parent to maintain his child does not cease upon his
or her
death and is a debt resting upon his or her estate. (See too Hoffmann
v Herdan NO and Another
1982 (2) SA 274
(T)
at 275H.) However, the child's claim against the parent's estate for
maintenance, although it enjoys preference vis-a-vis inheritances
and legacies which, if insufficient, must abate in proportion to the
amounts bequeathed by the deceased, cannot be brought in competition
with the claims of ordinary creditors.”
d)
In
Du
Toit NO v Thomas NO and Others
[14]
the mother of a minor child obtained an order in the Maintenance
Court against the executors of the father’s deceased estate
in
the period before the executor lodged the liquidation and
distribution account with the Master. In dismissing the application
by the executors to set aside the order of the Maintenance Court, the
Court stated:
“
[17] It
has become settled law that the duty of a parent to maintain a child
does not cease upon a parent's death, but is transmissible
and
becomes a debt resting upon the deceased estate. The correlative
right of a child to such maintenance does not arise out of
any
principle of inheritance, but out of the family relationship between
parent and child…
[18]
As a testamentary executor the applicant stepped into the shoes of
the deceased and became the person chosen by the deceased
to
represent him. From the date the applicant received letters of
executorship he represented the estate. This included paying,
under
certain circumstances, estate liabilities. Maintenance of
the minor child is one such liability…
[20]
In the light of the above it follows that while the deceased estate
is intact the child's claim for maintenance will lie
against the
executor, as it did against her deceased father during the father's
lifetime.”
15]
The objection flows from the position adopted by the defendants in
their letter of 16 October
2021
[15]
that, in order to succeed in the claim, the plaintiff must prove that
she is “unable to maintain and educate” the minor
children
[16]
. This position,
according to the defendants, flows from the text in par 21.31 of
Meyerowtiz 10
th
edition, the relevant
portion of which states:
“
Both
the father and the mother are liable for the support of their minor
children during minority until the children are able by
their own
industry or means to support themselves. Numerous cases have held
that this duty of maintaining and educating their children
does not
cease upon their deaths but is a ‘debt resting on their
estates’…
During
the lifetime of the parents the burden of maintenance is
distributable between them according to their means. It should
follow, therefore, that the burden should be distributed between the
estate of the deceased parent and the surviving parent on the
same
basis and not merely where the surviving parent is unable to maintain
the minor or can only do so adequately. The cases cited
in note
7
[17]
rather
suggest, however, that the claim on the estate only arises where the
surviving parent is unable to maintain the minors adequately…
Any
benefits received by a minor from the estate of the deceased parent,
whether ad intestate or by will, must be taken into account
in
considering his claim for maintenance.”
16]
But what is clear from the authorities upon which the defendants rely
in rejecting the claim
and in founding this exception is that, at the
very best, there is a difference of opinion in whether or not the
plaintiff must
first demonstrate that she is unable to maintain the
minor children adequately before she can claim maintenance from the
deceased
estate.
17]
Mr Els submitted that the words “
provided
the surviving spouse is unable to maintain and educate them
”
in
Ritchken
was said
obiter
dictum
and
no more - I agree. In any event, even were that to have been
the position in 1924, given s28(2) of the Constitution
[18]
,
and s9 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005,
[19]
our law has progressed to a stage where fathers of illegitimate
children are obligated to support them financially, and a surviving
spouse may claim maintenance from a deceased estate by virtue of the
Maintenance of Surviving Spouses Act 27 of 1990 which was
not the
position prior to this.
18]
Insofar as the cases are interpreted to suggest that it is only when
a surviving spouse/parent
is unable to support a minor child that a
claim lies against a deceased estate, I am of the view that they are
wrongly decided
and I decline to follow them:
a)
it is clear from the authorities that the obligation to support
a
minor child extends to a deceased estate;
b)
during his/her lifetime, a parent’s obligation to support
a
child arises not only out of the common law, but also is encapsulated
in the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998
,
s15(1)
of which states:
“
Without
derogating from the law relating to the liability of persons to
support children who are unable to support themselves, a
maintenance
order for the maintenance of a child is directed at the enforcement
of the common law duty of the child’s parent
to support that
child, as the duty in question exists at the time of the issue of the
maintenance order and is expected to continue.”;
c)
for purposes of the definition of a “child”, the
Children’s Act defines a child as a person under the age of 18
years;
d)
the interpretation of the words “
who are unable
”
to support themselves in
s15(1)
supra, is nothing more than a
statement of fact ie that minor children are deemed to be unable to
support themselves. This finds
support too in Meyerowtiz (supra).
19]
But over and above this, the Constitution and the Children’s
Act cannot be ignored:
a)
s28(2) of the Constitution states:
“
A child’s
best interests are of paramount importance in every matter concerning
the child.”
b)
s9 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 states:
“
In all matters
concerning the care, protection and well-being of a child the
standard that the child’s best interest is of
paramount
importance, must be applied.”
20]
If the executor steps into the shoes of the deceased, and he assumes
the maintenance obligations
of the deceased, it stands to logic that
the principles generally applicable to maintenance claims for minor
children must be applied:
ie that the duty of support falls to both
parents according to their means. What their means is, is informed by
the evidence placed
before the court at the time of the enquiry
[20]
and on the executor in accordance with his duties to utilise the
assets, finances and income of the deceased estate to maintain
the
children in accordance with the general principles applicable.
21]
Furthermore:
(a)
“
care”
is defined in the Children’s Act as
“…
(a)
within available means providing the child with –
(i)
a suitable place to live;
(ii)
living conditions that are conducive to the child’s health,
well-being and development; and
(iii)
the necessary financial support.”
(b)
s18(2)(d) prescribes that parental responsibilities and rights
include
the right to contribute to the maintenance of the child;
(c)
the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998
applies:
“
(1)
in regards of the legal duty of any person to maintain any other
person, irrespective of the nature
of the relation between those
persons giving rise to that duty.”
22]
In Beck’s Principles of Pleadings the learned author states:
“
Evidence
must not be pleaded. “It is a trite rule of pleading that a
defendant is entitled to know what the case is which
he has to meet.
He is not entitled to know the evidence but he is entitled to know
the grounds upon which the case is based.”
“There is a
distinction between giving evidence of fact and stating that fact…
Stating that a thing was done is stating
a fact; giving the details
of how it was done would be giving evidence of it. Sometimes it is
very difficult to state a fact concisely,
without in stating it,
indicating the evidence of it…. Under the present rules of
pleading you may not only state the necessary
facts, but you are
required to state all material facts relied on. So that if a fact
which, not absolutely necessary but material
either in aggravation or
mitigation, is within your knowledge and you intend to lay it before
the Court, you are invited and it
is certainly your privilege to
plead it.” To plead evidence may be most embarrassing.”
[21]
23]
Thus, in order to disclose a cause of action, the plaintiff’s
pleading must set out
‘
every
fact (material fact) which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to
prove, if traversed in order into support his right
to judgment of
the court. It does not comprise every piece of evidence which is
necessary to prove each fact, but every fact which
is necessary to be
proved.’
[22]
24]
Given all the above, I am of the view that insofar as
Ritchken
and
Goldman
NO
suggest that a claim only lies against a
deceased estate in the event that the plaintiff is unable to support
them, this is clearly
wrong and I decline to follow these decisions.
Thus, it is not necessary for plaintiff to aver this in her
Particulars of Claim
to found her cause of action.
25]
As to what allegations the plaintiff must make: the basis of the
defendants’ objection
is that the plaintiff has failed to
specifically plead the basis upon which the actuary reached his
calculations - but this is
not necessary as it is no more than
opinion and ultimately rests on the evidence placed before the court.
At best for the defendants,
the issue is whether the failure to plead
the facta probantia renders the pleading bad in law - it does not.
26]
On every construction of the Particulars of Claim the defendants are
able to plead as the
pleading shows the defendants the case they are
called upon to meet.
27]
The exception must therefore fail.
COSTS
28]
The plaintiff has asked for attorney and client costs de bonis
propriis against the defendants.
In
Du
Toit NO v Errol Thomas NO and Others
[23]
the court granted this
costs order because of the executor’s “unconscionable
conduct”.
29]
In
In
re: Alluvial Creek Ltd
[24]
the court stated:
“
An
order is asked for that he pay the costs as between attorney and
client. Now sometimes such an order is given because of something
in
the conduct of a party which the Court considers should be punished,
malice, misleading the Court and things like that, but
I think the
order may also be granted without any reflection upon the party where
the proceedings are vexatious, and by vexatious
I mean where they
have the effect of being vexatious, although the intent may not have
been that they should be vexatious. There
are people who enter into
litigation with the most upright purpose and a most firm belief in
the justice of their cause, and yet
whose proceedings may be regarded
as vexatious when they put the other side to unnecessary trouble and
expense which the other
side ought not to bear. That I think is the
position in the present case.”
30]
I see no reason why the deceased estate should bear the costs of this
exception: it was
ill-advised and ill-founded. On every construction
of the law, and more especially bearing in mind s28(2) of the
Constitution and
the provisions of the Children’s Act set out
supra, the deceased estate bears a duty of support and the only
question is:
what is the extent of that duty? The extent of the duty
will be advised by the evidence placed before the trial court.
ORDER
1.
The exception is dismissed with costs, such costs to be paid by the
first and second defendants (first and
second excipients) de bonis
propriis on Scale C.
NEUKIRCHER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 7 June 2024.
Appearances:
For the
plaintiff/respondent:
APJ Els SC
Instructed
by:
Arthur
Channon Attorneys
For
the 1
st
and 2
nd
defendants/
excipients:
K
Howard
Instructed
by:
Vermeulen
Attorneys
Matter
heard on:
6 May
2024
Judgment
date:
7
June 2024
[1]
EOGL who is 15 years old; and JOCL who is almost 13 years old.
[2]
“Any person interested in the estate may at any time before
the expiry of the period allowed for inspection lodge with
the
Master in duplicate any objection, with the reasons therefor, to any
such account and the Master shall deliver or transmit
by registered
post to the executor a copy of any such objection together with
copies of any documents which such person may have
submitted to the
Master in support thereof.”
[3]
Trope
v SA Reserve Bank
[1993] ZASCA 54
;
1993 (3) SA 264
(A) at 269 I
[4]
1997
(2) SA 415
(A) at 422
[5]
Liquidators Wapejo Shipping Co Ltd v Lurie Bros
1924 AD 69
at 75
[6]
Klerck NO v Van Zyl & Maritz NNO and related cases
1989 (4) SA
263
(NE) at 288
[7]
1992
(3) SA 208
(T) at 210 G-H
[8]
Voget
v Kleynhans
2003 (2) SA 148
(C) at 151
[9]
The major children as well in certain circumstances (Hoffman v
Herdan NO & Another
1982 (2) SA 274
(T)) but as this is not
relevant to the present discussion, I leave it there.
[10]
1924 WLD 17
[11]
The testator’s divorced wife who was given primary care and
residence of the child at the time of the divorce.
[12]
1937
WLD 64
[13]
1989
(4) SA 475
(C) at 477 G-J
[14]
2016
(4) SA 571
(WCC)
[15]
Para
2 supra
[16]
Ritchken supra and Goldman NO supra
[17]
Ie Ritchken and Goldman supra
[18]
“
S28(2)
A child’s best
interests are of paramount importance in every matter concerning the
child.”
[19]
“
S9
In
all matters concerning the care, protection and well-being of a
child the standard that the child’s best interest is
of
paramount importance, must be applied.”
[20]
Lamb v Sack
1974 (2) SA 670
(T); Bursey v Bursey 1999 (3) SA 33
(SCA)
[21]
at page 29
[22]
McKenzie v Farmers Co-Operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23
Nel
NNO v McArthur
2003 (4) SA 142
(T) and Koch Property Consultants CC
v Lepelle-Nkumpi Local Municipality
2006 (2) SA 25
(T) at 30-31
[23]
(635/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 94
(1 June 2016)
[24]
1929 CPD 532
at 535
sino noindex
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