Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 683South Africa
Mnisi and Others v Master of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria and Other (2023/013876) [2024] ZAGPPHC 683 (17 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 July 2024
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mnisi and Others v Master of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria and Other (2023/013876) [2024] ZAGPPHC 683 (17 July 2024)
Mnisi and Others v Master of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria and Other (2023/013876) [2024] ZAGPPHC 683 (17 July 2024)
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sino date 17 July 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No: 2023/013876
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 18 JULY 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
JACOB
CHARLES MNISI
First Applicant
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
MENZI
JOHN NYAMBI
Second Applicant
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
MAHLEKISANE
MOSA CHRIWA
Third Applicant
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
FANYANA
ENOCH BHEMBE
Fourth Applicant
(ID
NO.: 5[...])
and
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT OF
First Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICA, GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
SMILE
ZANDILE NKOSI N.O.
Second Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
HLUPHEKA
SALMINAH MOHALE N.O.
Third Respondent
(ID
NO.: 5[...])
RODAH
LINDIWE MGWEBYA N.O.
Fourth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
JOSIAH
NDABAMBI MOKOENA N.O.
Fifth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 7[...])
BONGANE
KENNETH SHAKOANE N.O.
Sixth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
MAQUANDASHI
ELIAS MATHABA N.O.
Seventh Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
ISAAC
SITHOLE N.O.
Eighth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 7[...])
HENDRY
SIPHO LAMOLA N.O.
Nineth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
MOKWAZI
THEMBEKA MDZINGASE NKAMBULE N.O.
Tenth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 8[...])
MAGOLIDI
JIM MANDLAZI N.O.
Eleventh Respondent
(ID
NO.: 5[...])
ZULU
SAMUEL CHIRWA N.O.
Twelfth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
HENDRY
NTININI MZIMBA N.O.
Thirteenth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
AGNES
NTOMBIKAYISE MAVUSO N.O.
Fourteenth Respondent
(ID
NO.: 6[...])
Delivered.
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 14h00 on 17
July 2024.
JUDGMENT
DM
LEATHERN, AJ:
[1]
The present application commenced as an urgent
application divided into a “PART A” dealing on an urgent
basis with an
interdict restraining the second to fourteenth
respondents from carrying on any business of the Lebuyile Community
Trust (“the
trust”) pending the determination of PART B.
Part B sought a declaratory order that the second to fourteenth
respondents
were not duly elected as trustees of the trust at a
properly constituted annual general meeting, that such general
meeting was
not duly constituted in terms of the trust deed and that
the second to fourteenth respondents were not in terms of the trust
deed
eligible to be elected as trustees as they did not reside on the
property concernced.
[2]
In addition, an order was sought against the first
respondent, the Master of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
(“the Master”) that the Master
withdraw the letter of authority issued in respect of the trust, that
the Master be
ordered to appoint the applicants as trustees together
with an independent trustee to be nominated by the Master to act in
such
capacity pending the election of trustees for the trust at a
duly constituted annual general meeting to be held within thirty days
from date of the order.
[3]
As usual, also the question of costs is relevant.
[4]
The matter came before this Court when I as an
Acting Judge had been appointed for one day, and a number of opposed
applications
had been allocated to me. At the hearing of the
matter it was made clear that the entire matter could not be heard on
that
day and pointed out that the courts frowned upon only certain
aspects being heard and matters decided on a piecemeal basis as such
could give rise to the matter being referred back to the Court
a
quo
after an appeal had been heard.
Nevertheless, the Court was requested and convinced to determine a
single point
in limine
,
that being whether this Court has jurisdiction to hear PART B.
[5]
The question of jurisdiction had been raised in
respect of the relief sought in Part A and Khumalo J held that this
Court did not
have jurisdiction to hear the relief sought in Part A.
A similar point is now taken in regard to Part B.
[6]
The respondents point out that:-
[6.1]
it has already been found by this Court that all
the applicants, the trust and the trustees are located within the
territorial jurisdiction
of the High Court, Mpumalanga;
[6.2]
the decision complained of, the subject matter and
the cause of action including the effect of the decision would all be
restricted
to the territorial are of jurisdiction of the Mpumalanga
High Court;
[6.3]
only two allegations are made to vest jurisdiction
in this Court, those being that the trust was registered with the
Master of the
High Court, Pretoria and the trustees have been
appointed by the Master of the High Court, Pretoria.
[7]
It is not disputed that the authorities make it
plain that onus of establishing that the division of the High Court
concerned has
jurisdiction ordinarily rests upon the applicant who,
as in this case, is
dominus litis
.
[8]
The respondents further argue that on a proper
interpretation of Sections 6 and 7 of the Trust Property Control Act,
the Master
of the High Court did not appoint the trustees but that
trustees are in fact appointed in terms of the trust deed or under
Section
7 when the office of a trustee cannot be filled or becomes
vacant when the Master can in the absence of any provision in the
trust
instrument and after consultation appoint any person as trustee
or when he considers it desirable he may, notwithstanding the
provisions
of the trust instrument, appoint as co-trustee of any
serving trustee any person who he deems fit. The respondents
submit
further that in terms of the Trust Property Control Act the
Master may not refuse authorisation of a duly appointed trustee
except
in cases where he cannot furnish security when required to do
so.
[9]
Bringing this argument to its conclusion, it was
submitted that trustees were appointed in terms of the trust deed and
only authorised
by the Master, that the Master made no decision that
can be challenged but merely authorised appointments duly made by the
trust
where there was compliance with the provisions of Section 6.
[10]
The respondents then take the matter further by
alleging that on the merits the relief claimed by the applicants in
relation to
the withdrawal of the letter of authority is not
competent as the Master did not appoint but merely authorised the
appointment
in terms of the trust deed. It is argued that the
relief claimed is therefore not against the Master situated in
Pretoria
at all, but rather against the trust or in relation to the
appointment and election process which all fall outside the
jurisdiction
of this Court.
[11]
Relying
on the decision in
Estate
Agents Board v Lek
[1]
the submission is made that convenience and common sense as well as
effectiveness remain valid considerations when considering
the issue
of jurisdiction and building on this, the facts mentioned lead
ineluctably to the conclusion that it is convenient for
the matter to
be heard in the Mpumalanga Division of the High Court.
[12]
The submission is then made on the basis of these
arguments, that this Court does not have the necessary jurisdiction
to adjudicate
upon the relief as sought.
[13]
On a proper reading of
Estate
Agents Board v Lek
, it is however
apparent that the Court there did not determine that only the Cape
Provincial Division had jurisdiction and that
only the then Transvaal
Provincial Division or the Witwatersrand Local Division would have
had jurisdiction to determine the appeal.
To the contrary it
found that the Court
a quo
was “
an
appropriate Court” (my underling).
[14]
The applicants point out that the trust was
registered in the office of the Master of the High Court, Pretoria
when the Master of
the High Court Mpumlanga did not even exist, the
trust has factually been administered by the Master and that Section
3 of the
Trust Property Control Act provides
inter
alia
in Section 3(1)(a) that
“
a
Master who has exercised jurisdiction shall continue to have
jurisdiction notwithstanding any change in the situation of the great
or greater portion of the trust property”.
[15]
It seriously cannot be disputed that the trust was
administered in terms of the Act by the Master, Pretoria.
[16]
The
applicant referred to the matter of
JP
van Schalkwyk Attorneys v Botha N.O. & another
[2]
a judgment by Davis J who, after setting out with reference to
Section 3(1)(a) of the Trust Property Control Act that a trust was
administered by the Master in Pretoria, had never been transferred to
a different Master, found that “the supervision over
the
administration of a trust, which includes the supervision over the
sequestration of that trust is a sufficient
ratio
jurisdictiones
for
jurisdiction to exist”.
[17]
The facts in the
van
Schalkwyk
matter do not divert
sufficiently from those in the present matter to distinguish the
decision of Davis J. I am also not convinced
that he is
incorrect in the finding and am accordingly bound to follow that
decision.
[18]
I would in any event have come to the same
decision on the basis that specific relief is sought against the
Master including that
in prayer 3 under Part B where an order
directing the Master to appoint the applicants as trustees of the
trust
together with an independent
trustee
to be nominated by the Master
is sought. The seeking of such an order against the Master
would certainly vest jurisdiction
in this Court and where
Section 21(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that a
Division also has jurisdiction over any person residing in or being
outside its area of jurisdiction who is joined
as a party to any
causes in relation to which such Court has jurisdiction if the said
person resides or is within the area of jurisdiction
of another
division is applicable
in casu
.
This Court has jurisdiction over the Master, Pretoria, and
accordingly over the other parties joined in such cause.
No
relief was sought against the Master in PART A.
[19]
This may be an appropriate matter in which to
apply in terms of Section 27 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2023
for the removal
of the proceedings from this Division to the
Mpumalanga Division, particularly where the challenge is on the basis
of convenience.
Even if it were to be found that this Court
does not have jurisdiction for any reason, it is empowered by that
Section to transfer
the matter to the Mpumalanga Division.
However, Section 27 requires that an application be launched by a
party and that all
parties be heard in regard to the proposed
transfer. That did not happen in the present instance.
There is however
nothing to prevent such an application being
launched.
[20]
Under the circumstances I find that this Court has
jurisdiction to determine Part B of the notice of motion and the
point
in limine
must
fail.
[21]
I accordingly order:
1.
The point
in limine
as to the jurisdiction of this Court in
respect of Part B raised by the second to fourteenth respondents is
dismissed.
2.
The second to fourteenth respondents are ordered
to pay the costs of the applicants, such costs to be determined on
scale C.
DM
LEATHERN
ACTING
Judge of the High Court
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIa
[1]
1979 (3) SA 1048 (A).
[2]
2021 JOL 50129
(GP).
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