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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Stander N.O. v Master of The High Court, Pretoria and Others
[2023] ZAGPPHC 113; 94792/2019 (24 February 2023)
Stander N.O. v Master of The High Court, Pretoria and Others
[2023] ZAGPPHC 113; 94792/2019 (24 February 2023)
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sino date 24 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 94792/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
24 FEBRUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
FRANS
STANDER N.O.
APPLICANT
and
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10h00 on 24 FEBRUARY 2023.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The relief sought in the application involves the narrow question of
costs. The crux is whether the First
Respondent, the Master of the
High Court Gauteng Division, Pretoria (“the Master”),
should, in the circumstances of
this matter, be mulcted with costs.
[2]
Only the Applicant, Frans Anthonie Stander N.O, who is cited herein
in his official capacity as the duly appointed
executor of the Estate
Late Ferreira with Estate Number: 15492/2017 (“the Estate”),
and the Master, are taking part
in these proceedings. The Applicant
did not seek any relief against the Second and Third Respondents, and
were merely cited in
these proceedings, in so far as they may have an
interest in the matter.
[3]
At the commencement of the hearing of this application, it was
brought to the attention of the Master’s
counsel that there
were no heads of argument filed on behalf of the Master. On
explanation by counsel, it became apparent that
there had been a
miscommunication between counsel and his instructing attorney in
respect of the filing of the heads of argument,
as well, as the date
of the hearing of the matter. Counsel for the Applicant had no issue
with the matter proceeding without the
Master having filed the heads
of argument, as such, the matter proceeded with only the Applicant’s
heads of argument having
been filed.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[4]
Mr Len Ferreira (“the Deceased”), who passed away on 16
October 2017, had in his Last Will and
Testament, appointed the
Applicant to be the Executor of his Estate in the event of his death.
The Master issued letters of executorship
to the Applicant, duly
appointing him as the executor of the Estate
.
The beneficiaries of the Deceased’s estate are his four
children who are dependent upon the Estate in respect of maintenance.
[5]
A
curator ad litem
was also appointed for two of the
beneficiaries whose mother had passed on even before the death of the
Deceased. The Deceased
has, in the Will, bequeathed his estate to the
four beneficiaries, to be held in trust until they each turned 25
years old. At
all times relevant to these proceedings, none of the
beneficiaries had reached the age of 25. The value of the Deceased
Estate
is estimated at approximately R62 million consisting of
various movable and immovable properties and monies held in a number
of
bank accounts.
[6]
It is alleged that in November 2018, almost a year after the
appointment of the Applicant as an executor,
the Master was informed
by the
curator ad litem
and the aunt and uncles of the
beneficiaries of the Estate that the Applicant was disposing of
property to the detriment of the
beneficiaries. On the basis of that
information, on 17 July 2019, the Master wrote to the Applicant
requesting that the Applicant
lodge on or before 23 August 2019, a
true and full account of the liquidation and distribution account of
the Estate, as well as,
proof that there was an existing banking
account in respect of the Estate.
[7]
According to the Master, in terms of the Act,
[1]
the liquidation and distribution account had to be lodged within six
months, and at the time of writing a request to the Applicant,
the
six months had already expired. The Applicant had also, not applied
for an extension of time for the lodgement of the account.
[8]
On 30 August 2019, the Applicant applied for the extension of time
within which to lodge the liquidation and
distribution account.
According to the Master, this application did not come to her
attention. Another letter was written by the
Applicant to the Master
on 7 October 2019, which letter did not come to the notice of the
Master as well. Having not received any
response from the Applicant,
and being under the impression that the Applicant ignored the letter
of the Master of 7 July 2019,
the office of the Master issued a J88
letter informing the Applicant of the Master’s intention to
remove him as Executor
of the Estate. The letter also afforded the
Applicant a period of 30 days within which to approach Court for an
order restraining
the Master from so removing him.
[9]
With his removal imminent, the Applicant launched an urgent
application which was heard on 27 December 2019.
The urgent
application was struck from the roll for lack of urgency and no order
as to costs was made. The application was re-enrolled
for hearing on
11 March 2021, when the relief sought by the Applicant was granted as
prayed for, except for the prayer for costs
which was postponed
sine
die
.
[10]
The Master had, since service upon her of the application, not filed
her answering affidavit. As a result, the postponement
of the prayer
for costs,
sine die
, necessitated the filing of an answering
affidavit by the Master. Even though it does not appear in the Order
of the Court granted
on 11 March 2021, it seems to be common cause
between the parties that at that hearing, the Master was granted
leave to file her
answering affidavit within ten (10) days. The
Master was unable to file the answering affidavit within the
stipulated period of
ten days, and
per
agreement between the
parties, the Applicant allowed the Master to file on 9 April 2021.
The Master was unable to meet this deadline
as well, and requested a
further indulgence from the Applicant to file the answering affidavit
on 12 April 2021, which request
was declined by the Applicant. The
answering affidavit was, in any event, filed on 12 April 2021, which
necessitated the application
for condonation.
CONDONATION
[11]
The Master has applied for the condonation of the late filing of the
answering affidavit which, the Applicant is opposing.
The issue
that this Court has to decide at this stage of the proceedings, is
whether the Master should be granted condonation for
the late filing
of the answering affidavit.
[12]
Rule 27(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court (“Rule 27(1)”)
provides that in the absence of agreement between
the parties, the
Court may upon application on notice and on good cause shown, make an
order extending or abridging any time prescribed
by these rules or by
an order of Court or fixed by an order extending or abridging any
time for doing any act or taking any step
in connection with any
proceedings of any nature whatsoever upon such terms as to it seems
meet.
[13]
The test for condonation is trite and well established. It is a
well-known principle of our law that, for the Court to
grant the
condonation applied for, it must be satisfied that the applicant has
established or shown good cause. In order to determine
whether good
cause is shown, the following factors together with any other
relevant factors are taken into account: the degree
of lateness, the
reasons for the lateness, the prospects of success, any prejudice
that the respondent may suffer, and the respondent’s
interest
in finality.
[2]
[14]
The crux in this condonation application, is the degree of lateness.
The Master’s counsel contends that the Master
was late by one
day only, whereas counsel for the Applicant submits that the Master
was late for at least a year and eight months
because she has been
late since the time she failed to file the answering affidavit upon
service on her, of the main application.
[15]
For the reasons that follow hereunder, this Court is in agreement
with the argument raised by counsel for the Master
that the Master
was late by one day only. In this Court’s view, this is a
classic case covering all the facets of Rule 27(1).
[16]
It is common cause that in terms of the notice of motion served on
her, the Master was supposed to have filed an answering
affidavit by
17h00 on or before 24 December 2019, but, the answering affidavit was
not filed, and the matter, was subsequently,
struck off the roll for
lack of urgency. It is, also, not in dispute that when the matter
appeared in the opposed motion Court
on 11 March 2021, the Master had
still not filed her answering affidavit, and had to be granted leave
to file the answering affidavit
within ten (10) days, when the prayer
for costs was postponed.
[17]
It is this Court’s view that, in granting the Master leave to
file the answering affidavit, the Court had in terms
of Rule 27(1)
exercised its inherent powers of the High Court to regulate its own
processes,
[3]
and extended the
time within which the Master should file her answering affidavit.
When the Master failed to file the answering
affidavit within the
time of ten (10) days fixed by an order of Court, she asked for a
further extension from the Applicant. And,
by agreement between the
parties the time for filing was, further, extended to 9 April 2021.
Rule 27(1) allows the extension of
prescribed time periods by
agreement between the parties. The result is that, by filing
her answering affidavit on 12 April
2021, as she did, the Master was
late by only one day -
9
April 2021 was on a Friday and 12 April 2021 on a Monday.
[18]
It is a trite principle of our law that, in condonation applications,
the Court has a discretion which must be exercised
judicially on a
consideration of the facts of each case. In the exercise of this
Court’s discretion, it is its view that
the degree of lateness,
that is, one day, is slight and warrants condonation. Thus, the
condonation in this matter ought to be
granted.
COSTS
[19]
The issue of costs emanates from the Master’s refusal to pay
the Applicant’s costs of the main application
even though she
conceded all the other prayers sought in the notice of motion. There
appears, also, to be a dispute as to the scale
at which the costs
ought to be awarded, that is, whether it should be on a scale between
party and party or attorney and client,
in the event it is found that
the Applicant is entitled to such costs.
Arguments
[20]
The Master is opposing the request for a cost order against her on
the basis that she was executing her duties of ensuring
an orderly
winding up of the Estate and protecting the interests of the minor
children who are the beneficiaries in terms of the
Will. She contends
that If she had not intervened, she would have failed in her duties
as the Master, most importantly, she would
have failed the
beneficiaries and in all probability have been brought to Court by
the
Curator ad litem
, who is still threatening to do so.
[21]
Furthermore, the Master argues that this Court should not follow the
general principle governing costs that the successful
party should
have his or her costs, instead it must exercise its discretion and
award costs against the Estate or the Applicant
in his personal
capacity. The basis of this request, according to the Master, rests
against the background that, had the Applicant
lodged the Liquidation
and Distribution account within the prescribed period, alternatively,
requested an extension timeously,
the Master would not have had to
invoke the provisions of section 54 of the Act. The contention is
that the Applicants conduct
in the administration of this Estate was
dilatory, and should therefore be held accountable by being mulcted
with costs.
In oral argument in Court the Master’s
counsel, on a question from the bench, submitted that the Master was
opposing
the payment of cost and that at best each party should be
ordered to pay its own costs.
[22]
The Master submits that she inadvertently missed the Applicant’s
application for extension of time within which
to file the
liquidation and distribution account, and acted only on the
information that was before her at the time. And, immediately
she
became aware that the Applicant had launched the account she did not
pursue the opposition of the main application and conceded
to the
relief sought by the Applicant.
[23]
Moreover, there was no
mala fide
intent on her part, her
intention had at all material times, which was
bona fide
, was
to do her work and protect the Estate of the minor children who are
beneficiaries in the Estate.
[24]
The Applicant, on the other hand, submits that
if
the Master had complied with her functions and properly performed her
duties, then there would not have been any need for the
Applicant to
launch an urgent application in order to protect his appointment as
the Executor of the Estate. Furthermore, it is
argued that the Master
was kept informed by correspondence of the difficulties that the
Applicant encountered in the administration
of the Estate and the
failure by the Master’s office to provide him with the consents
and certificates, which he required
to administer the Estate.
[25]
In oral argument before this Court, counsel for the Applicant,
referred to two letter (Annexures C and M) which formed
part of the
record, to rebut any allegations of wrongdoing by the Applicant. The
said letters show that the Master was always kept
well appraised of
the issues and the winding up process of the Estate. For instance,
the contention is that, on 28 August 2019
and 7 October 2019, by
means of two detailed letters, the Master was given updates. The
papers if properly considered demonstrate
that the applicant has only
ever been absolutely exemplary in the manner in which he wound up the
Estate.
[26]
A further argument is that at the hearing of the urgent application,
the Master made a tender for party and party costs,
and should
therefore be held to such tender. The contention is that the
Applicant can do no worse than receive a cost order ordering
the
Master to pay the cost of the application on a party and party scale.
The sole purpose of the Master’s opposition of
the cost order
is to an attempt to avoid a cost order on the attorney and client
scale, so it is argued.
Discussion
[27]
The grounds raised by the respective parties as to whether a cost
order should be awarded against the Master, seeks to
impute
wrongdoing on each other.
Whether
the Applicant is entitled to the costs
[28]
In this Court’s view, it is disingenuous of the Master to raise
the argument that she should not be ordered to
pay the costs of the
application or that an order be granted that each party pay own
costs. The evidence on record shows, clearly
so, that the matter was
postponed on 11 March 2021 solely for the purpose of arguing whether
the costs to be awarded the Applicant,
ought to be on an attorney and
client scale or not.
[29]
The uncontested evidence of the Applicant is that on conceding the
relief sought by the Applicant the Master tendered
the costs of the
application. It was only when the Applicant sought a cost order on an
attorney and client scale that the Master
opposed the costs, hence
the matter was postponed solely for argument on that narrow issue of
the scale on which the costs should
be awarded. This Court is thus
satisfied that the Master has already tendered to pay the Applicant’s
costs.
[30]
Besides, a flexible approach to costs has over the years been
developed by our Courts which proceeds from two basic principles.
The
first principle is that the award of costs, unless expressly
otherwise enacted, is in the discretion of the presiding judicial
officer. The second is that ordinarily costs follow the result and a
successful party is, therefore, entitled to his or her costs.
[4]
In this case the Applicant is the successful party and is, therefore,
entitled to costs. The question is whether in the circumstances
of
this matter the Applicant should be granted a punitive cost order.
What
scale should the costs be awarded?
[31]
When considering whether to grant a punitive cost order, the
Constitutional Court in
Tjiroze
v Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board,
[5]
Expressed
itself as follows:
“
[22]
. . .
There is no reason not to
award costs against the applicant. The question is: is the
punitive scale prayed for warranted?
[23]
In
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank,
[6]
Mogoeng CJ
noted that
“
[c]osts
on an attorney and client scale are to be awarded where there is
fraudulent, dishonest, vexatious conduct and conduct that
amounts to
an abuse of court process”.
Although
that was in the minority judgment, I do not read the majority
judgment to differ on this. In the majority judgment
Khampepe J
and Theron J further noted that
“
a
punitive costs order is justified where the conduct concerned is
‘extraordinary’ and worthy of a court’s rebuke”.
[7]
Both
judgments referred to
Plastic
Converters Association of SA
,
[8]
in which the Labour Appeal Court stated:
“
The
scale of attorney and client is an extraordinary one which should be
reserved for cases where it can be found that a litigant
conducted
itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner.
Such an award is exceptional and is intended
to be very
punitive and indicative of extreme opprobrium.”
[32]
Furthermore, it has been held that the Court’s reluctance to
award attorney and client costs against a party is
based on the right
of every person to bring complaints or alleged wrongs before the
Court to get a decision, and a litigant should
not be penalised if
misguided in bringing a hopeless case before the Court. If,
however, the Court is satisfied that there
is an absence of
bona
fides
in bringing or defending an action it will not
hesitate to award attorney and client costs.
[33]
Based on the aforementioned authorities, this Court is of the view
that an award of costs on an attorney and client scale
is not
warranted in the circumstances of these proceedings. It is evident
from the evidence of the Master and the circumstances
that prevailed
at the time she sent the J88 letter to the Applicant, that there were
no
mala fide
intentions on her part.
CONCLUSION
[34]
This Court concludes, therefore, that a cost order should be awarded
against the Master on a party and party scale. These
costs must
include the costs occasioned by the postponement on 11 March 2021.
ORDER
[35]
Consequently, the following order is made:
a.
The application for condonation is granted.
b.
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application
on a party and party scale.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL:
ADV EG MALHERBE
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS:
MANLEY INC ATTORNEYS
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL:
ADV MASHABELA
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS:
STATE ATTORNEY
[1]
The
Administration of Estate Act, 1966.
[2]
Melane v Santam Insurance Company Limited
1962 (4) SA 531
(A) at
552.
[3]
See Erasmus: Superior Court Practice Volume 2 pD1-321.
[4]
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC)
at 624B—C par 3.
[5]
[2020]
ZACC 18
para 22 and 23.
[6]
2019
(9) BCLR 1113
(CC)
at para 8.
[7]
Id
at para 226.
[8]
[2016]
ZALAC 39
;
(2016) 37 ILJ 2815 (LAC) at para 46.
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