Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 180South Africa
Kinnear and Another v Master of the High Court and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 180; 36165/2021 (24 March 2023)
Headnotes
SUMMARY: Notice of Motion: Declaratory Order that an unsigned will is valid- Section 2(3) of the Wills Act, 1988 (Act 57 of 1988) – Jurisdictional requirements.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kinnear and Another v Master of the High Court and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 180; 36165/2021 (24 March 2023)
Kinnear and Another v Master of the High Court and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 180; 36165/2021 (24 March 2023)
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sino date 24 March 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER:
36165/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
DALE
ALISTAIR KINNEAR
1
st
APPLICANT
MELANIE
MERLYN KINNEAR
2
nd
APPLICANT
and
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
1
st
RESPONDENT
SHAAYNAZ
RAMDHANI, NO
2
nd
RESPONDENT
DOMINIC
AUSTIN KINNEAR
3
rd
RESPONDENT
SUMMARY:
Notice
of Motion: Declaratory Order that an unsigned will is valid- Section
2(3) of the Wills Act, 1988 (Act 57 of 1988) –
Jurisdictional
requirements.
ORDER
Held: Application
is dismissed
Held: The costs to
be paid out of the Estate of the deceased.
JUDGMENT
MNCUBE, AJ:
INTRODUCTION:
[1] This is an opposed
declaratory application in which the applicants are seeking the
following relief-
‘
1.
An order that the Master of the High Court, and all persons dealing
with and that are affected receive, approve and accept the
document
described as “00540151X8, THE WILL OF FLORENCE DINAH ROSINA
KINNEAR”, for the purpose of the
Administration of Estates Act
66 of 1965
, as the Last Will and Testament of the late Florence Dinah
Rosina Kinnear, even though it does not comply with all of the usual
or normal formalities for the execution of a valid Will.
2. That the costs of
this Application be paid by the party that unsuccessfully opposes the
application, alternatively, the cost
of the application be paid by
the Estate of the Late FLORENCE DINAH ROSINA KINNER.
3. Further and or
alternative relief.’
[2] The applicants, Mr
Dale Alistair Kinnear and Ms Melanie Merlyn Kinnear who are siblings
are represented by Adv. Mabilo. The
application is only opposed by
the third respondent, Mr Dominic Austin Kinnear who is the biological
child of the first applicant
and who is represented by Adv. Coetsee.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND:
[3] The applicants’
biological parents were married in community of property on 4 April
1970 and had drafted a joint Will
on 2 October 2013. The terms of the
joint will among others bequeathed the immovable property to the
third respondent who is their
grandson. The applicants’
father passed away on 31 August 2018 and the estate was wound up in
2019. After the
death of the applicants’ mother, a new
Will which amends the terms of the joint Will was produced which was
not signed. The
executor of the estate of the deceased was duly
informed about the existence of the new Will and of the intention to
obtain a declaratory
order from this court recognising the validity
of the new Will. This then led to the current application for a
declaratory order.
Notice was served on the third respondent on 24
August 2021 who filed notice of intention to oppose and filed his
answering affidavit
on 3 December 2021. The non-compliance with
Rule
6
(5) (d) (i) and
Rule 6
(5) (d) (ii) was condoned by order of this
court.
ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION:
[4] The issues for
determination are whether or not the document described as
00540151X8, THE WILL OF FLORENCE DINAH ROSINAH KINNEAR
falls
within the ambit of section 2(3) of the Wills Act, 1988 (Act 7 of
1988) and whether or not the applicants have made out a
case for the
relief claimed.
SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE:
(a)
Applicants’ case:
[5] The first applicant
states in his founding affidavit that his parents had a joint Will
and after the death of his father it
was his mother’s wish to
finalize the winding up of his father’s estate before she made
a new Will. He avers that his
mother started the process (of making a
new Will) but due to ailing health she was not able to sign her new
Will. According to
the first applicant, his parents were astute
business people. After his father’s estate was wound up, his
mother instructed
her financial advisor to draw a new Will which was
early 2020. He concedes that he was not privy to the discussion about
the content
of the new Will. The first applicant’s averments
are that on 9 May 2020 his mother was admitted in hospital in the ICU
and
while in hospital she suffered a stroke and broke a leg. He
states that after her release from hospital, his mother requested to
see Mr Burden in order to finalize her instructions to him for the
new Will. Mr Burden came to his mother during June 2020. He
avers
that he was close to his mother who indicated that she wants to make
a new Will because the joint Will bequeathed the immovable
property
to the third respondent and she was no longer happy with that clause.
[6] According to the
first applicant, he states that his mother wanted to include his
other children so that they may inherit. He
avers that the unsigned
Will marked annexure DK2 is consistent with the instructions received
and the discussions held with his
mother. The first applicant
proceeds to list the number of unsuccessful attempts to have the new
Will signed. He avers that it
would be in the interest of justice if
the unsigned Will is declared valid and effective.
[7] The second applicant
in her supporting affidavit avers and confirms that Mr Jasper Burden
is a trusted financial adviser of
her late parents. She states that
Mr Burden had visited her late mother for the purpose of drawing a
new Will. She further confirms
that the contributing factors why the
new Will was not signed was due to the fact that her late mother had
been ill, was hospitalized
and attended the funeral of her cousin.
She confirms that she had numerous discussions with her late mother
relating to her new
Will and what her wish and desire were.
[8] Mr Jasper Burden
positively attests in his supporting affidavit that he is a financial
advisor at Blignaut and has read the
affidavit by the first applicant
and confirms that he was the financial advisor of the late Mr and Mrs
Kinnear. He avers that he
did consult with the deceased and drafted
the Will marked annexure DK2 which was drawn in accordance with the
specific instructions
of the deceased before her passing. He avers
further that the deceased was of lucid mind and the content of the
Will her understanding
and desire of what she wished for her estate.
He states that he was appraised by her on her relationship with her
children and
the grandson.
(b)
Third Respondent’s case:
[9] The third respondent
avers that the applicants are not entitled to the relief on the basis
that the formalities of a Will have
not been met. He states that
there is no evidence that the document was intended to be the final
Will and testament of his grandmother.
He denies that his grandmother
expressed any intention to amend or create a new will as a sense of
urgency following the death
of his grandfather. He states that he
shared a close bond with his grandmother who raised him from when he
was nine months old
and had who expressed to him that the house will
be bequeathed to him which was in accordance to the joint will. He
denies that
the purpose for the visit by Mr Jasper Burden was for his
grandmother to change the Will. The third respondent concedes to drug
addiction and avers that his grandparents were aware of and they
supported his recovery from. He states that there was a period
of
nine months prior to his grandmother’s passing that she could
have attended to revocation of the Will if she intended
it.
SUBMISSIONS MADE:
[10] Counsel for the
applicants argues in the heads of arguments that the applicants have
made out a case for the relief sought.
The submission is that Courts
approach this kind of application graciously and use a liberal
approach rather than a rigid approach.
The contention is that the
Court in its discretion may grant the application in terms of section
2(3) of the Wills Act 7 as amended
to have the will declared valid
despite non-compliance with prescribed formalities. Counsel concedes
that the Will is not signed
and not dated and argues that section
2(3) of the Wills Act gives the Court the discretion to overlook
minor non-compliance with
the prescribed formalities if it apparent
or can be proved that the Will represents the Testatrix’s true
intentions. Counsel
contends that the Testatrix’s true
intention is confirmed under oath by her financial adviser.
[11]
Counsel for the applicants contends that it is trite that
circumspection is required to prevent fraud if certain evidence would
be allowed, however, where there is proof that the Will does not
comply with the requirements of the Wills Act, the Court may rectify
or declare it valid. Reliance is made to
Cuming
v Cuming and Others
1944 AD 201
with
special reference to the word ‘effect’ which is a notion
which applies in this application. The submission is that
the conduct
of the third respondent in opposing the application is contrary to
the principle that the will must be read at the
time of death of the
testator according to the author G. Steyn
[1]
,
Law of the Wills in South Africa, 2
nd
ed,
(1948) pages 58 to 59.
[12] Counsel for the
applicants submits that there are no dispute of facts as the third
respondent conceded that he has a drug addiction
who was an alleged
nuisance to his grandmother who made her selection in the Will. He
prays for the application to be granted and
that the costs be paid by
the third respondent on punitive scale and the estate should not be
burdened by costs.
[13] Counsel for the
third respondent in the heads of arguments contends that the evidence
proffered by the applicants is vague
and inconsistent. It is
submitted that the document was not seen by the testatrix (the
deceased) and does not fall within the ambit
of section 2 (3) of the
Wills Act. The submission is that the following questions must be
answered- (a) whether the document falls
within the ambit of section
2(3) of the Wills Act within the meaning of ‘drafted’ or
‘executed’ and whether
the deceased is required to do so;
(b) whether the applicants have made out a case for the relief
sought. The contention is that
the applicants have not sought relief
of revocation of the joint Will.
[14] Counsel for the
third respondent contends that the applicants failed to make out a
case on the basis that the deceased was
not even aware of the content
of the document and did not have sight of it. Counsel refers to
Anderson NO and Others v Master of the Supreme Court and Others
1996(1) ALL SA (637) (C) a
nd to
Bekker v Naude
2003 (5)
SA 173
(SCA
. The submission is that the document was not
dictated or completed in the presence of the deceased and cannot fall
within the ambit
of section 2(3) of the Wills Act and the application
should fail. In the event that the finding be made that the document
falls
within the ambit of section 2(3) of the Wills Act, the
application should fail based on the inconsistency in the evidence of
Mr
Burden and the applicants. The contention is that there is no
allegation that the drafted will was discussed with the deceased.
Counsel prays for dismissal of the application with punitive costs on
the scale of attorney and client.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES:
[15]
Freedom of testation is a central principle of testation succession
as it recognises the right of a person to make arrangements
of his or
her assets as he or she wishes which is constitutionally
protected
[2]
. However this right
of testation is not without limitations- where the testamentary
instrument is contrary to public policy or
illegal or to
constitutional value, the court has discretion to intervene. See
King
NO and Others v De Jager and Others
2021 (4) SA 1
(CC).
[16] Section 2(1) of the
Wills Act prescribes the formalities applicable to Wills, in that
each page of the Will must be signed
by the testator and two
witnesses who must be in each other’s presence at the time.
[17] Section 2(3) of the
Wills Act provides that –
‘
If
a court is satisfied that a document or the amendment of a document
drafted or executed by a person who has died since drafting
or
execution thereof, was intended to be his Will or an amendment of his
Will, the court shall order the Master to accept that
document, or
that document as amended, for the purposes of the Administration of
Estates Act, 1965 (Act 66 of 1965), as a Will,
although it does not
comply with all the formalities for the execution or amendment of
Wills referred to in the subsection (1).’
[18] In terms of section
2(3) of the Wills Act, there are three jurisdictional requirements
which a court must be satisfied on-
1)
A document must serve before the court;
2)
Such document or amendment must have been
drafted or executed by the person who died (deceased);
3)
The deceased must have intended such
document as a will or an amendment of a will.
[19] In
Van Der
Merwe v The Master
2010 (6) SA 544
(SCA)
para [14], Navsa JA
held ‘It has rightly and repeated been said, that, once a court
is satisfied that the document concerned
meets the requirements of
the subsection, a court has no discretion whether or not to grant an
order envisaged therein. In other
words, the provisions of s 2(3) are
peremptory once the jurisdictional requirements have been satisfied.’
[20] A
testator has the right to revoke a will as well as to amend a will.
The proper manner to interpret any document is one compounded
in
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni Municipal
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
para
[18]. Where testamentary instruments are concerned, the
Constitutional Court in
Wilkinson and
Another v Crawford NO and Others
2021 (4) SA 323
(CC)
para
[35] held ‘The golden rule of interpretation of testamentary
instruments is to “ascertain the wishes of the testator
from
the language “used”. As a general rule, words and phrases
must be given the meaning they had at the time the testamentary
instrument was used.’
[21]
Where a bequest has been made in an earlier testamentary disposition,
it would require clear and unambiguous language in a
later
testamentary disposition to justify the Court making a finding that
the testator had intended to revoke such bequest. See
Ex Parte Adams
1046 CPD 267
at 268.
[22] The requirement that
the document or amendment must have been drafted or executed by the
deceased or testator was a subject
of uncertainty until
Bekker
v Naude
2003 (5) SA 173
(SCA)
para [20]. The facts were that
the appellant and the deceased had requested the bank to draft them a
joint will and had explained
what they wanted. The official took
notes and sent the notes to the bank’s head office where other
officials drafted a Will.
The deceased died before signing the Will.
The appellant instituted action for an order in terms of section 2(3)
of the Wills Act
seeking the Court to accept the document as draft
will of the deceased and an order to the Master to accept it. The
action was
dismissed. On appeal the SCA held that drafted when
compared with ‘caused to be drafted’ could only have the
strict
meaning of a personal act.
EVALUATION:
[23]
It is common cause that the deceased passed away 20 September 2020.
It is also common cause that the document purported to
be the Will of
the deceased is not signed. There are factual disputes pertaining to
the deceased’s intentions relating to
the immovable property
and the relationship between the deceased and the third
respondent , however by agreement between
the parties the matter is
to be disposed on legal arguments without applying the
Plascon-
Evans
rule.
[3]
In terms of section 2(3) of the Wills Act, I need to be satisfied
that the document was made by the deceased and reflects her intention
in compliance to the three jurisdictional requirements.
[24] The only issue I
have to determine in respect of the jurisdictional requirements in
section 2(3) of the Wills Act in reference
to ‘drafted’
or ‘executed’. The document was done by Mr Burden and
there is no evidence that the deceased
personally took part in the
drafting of this document.
[25]
The third respondent raises a pertinent point in that the deceased
had at least nine months before she passed on which as the
argument
goes rectification of the Will could have taken place. In support of
the argument, he refers me to
Giles
NO v Henriques
[2007] All SA 1409
(C)
which
was later taken on appeal
[4]
where at para [16] the SCA explains rectification. In the list
of authorities, I am referred
to
De Reszke v Czeslaw Maras and Others
2003 (6) SA 676(C)
in
which the issue was whether a document (annexure A) was intended to
be a will of the deceased within the ambit of section 2(3)
of the
Wills Act. In both the Court a quo and Appeal the Court dismissed the
action
[5]
[26] The first
applicant’s evidence with regard to the instructions actually
given to Mr Jasper Burden the financial adviser
is hearsay as he was
not present when those instructions were given. Mr Burden without
fully substantiating the content of the
instructions given to him by
the deceased merely confirms the first applicant’s founding
affidavit. Even if one accepts for
a moment that the deceased gave
instructions to revoke the joint will and make a new will, the
evidence is that she died before
seeing it. Applying
Bekker
to the facts, I am not satisfied that the deceased took a personal
act in drafting the alleged new Will. This is born out from
the fact
that there is a lacuna in the process from giving instructions
until they were carried out .Put differently, if
the deceased died
without seeing the terms of the alleged new Will, were the
instructions she allegedly gave to Mr Burden correctly
captured in
the purported new Will?
[27] In the event that I
am wrong in my findings that the applicants has failed to satisfy me
on the one jurisdictional requirement
in section 2(3) of the Wills
Act, even on their version they have failed on the balance of
probabilities to prove that it was the
deceased’s intention to
revoke the terms of the joint Will and conclude a new Will for the
following reasons-
a)
In his founding affidavit, the first
applicant avers ‘my parents were astute business people’
would wait to finalize
the signing of the alleged new Will because
her husband’s estate had been wound up. The passage of
time is contrary
to the behaviour of someone alleged to be astute. In
fact, the deteriorating health assessing the veracity of the facts)
ought
to have been the very factor causing her to urgently sign the
new Will. The averments that the alleged new Will could not be signed
due to ill-health is improbable on the basis that the deceased was
strong enough to attend a funeral and be a source of comfort
to the
grieving family yet had no time to attend to an important document
like a Will.
b)
On the one hand the first applicant avers
that he was not privy to the discussion about the content of the
terms of the new Will,
yet he was discussing the very content of the
Will. Which bring the following questions- how long after these
discussions did the
deceased draft the alleged Will? Did the
discussions not amount to ‘attest’ within a broad
interpretation? I
pose this question on the basis of the first
applicant’s averment that annexure DK2 was ‘
consistent
with instructions received and the discussions held with my late
mother’.
He is a witness to
his mother’s alleged intention and a beneficiary. In my view,
the meaning of ‘attest’ ought
to be extended to apply
under these facts, then what is the impact of section 4A (2) of the
Wills Act within the content of those
discussions? After all,
undue influence is a question which depends on the circumstances of
each case. Even if this is incorrect
(to extend the meaning of
‘attest’ within the ambit of section 4A and can be
disregarded), it does not retract from
the fact that the
probabilities shift in favour of the third respondent version.
c)
Apart from the questions raised above, it
is common cause that the deceased suffered a stroke which brings into
question her mental
state especially in view of the first applicant’s
averments that ‘
and undertook to
invite Jasper Burden back, after the pain had subsided and she felt
strong enough to deal with these matters.’
d)
In addition, the first applicant’s
averments suggests that the instructions were not yet finalized,
which then bring about
the question, how then was the alleged new
Will drafted?
[28] Similar sentiments
are shared with regard to the second applicant. Mr Burden avers that
the deceased was lucid which I find
improbable on the basis of the
founding affidavit which reflects that the deceased was not strong
enough to give instruction on
the Will. Mr Burden, does not
positively attest that the deceased had insight to the alleged draft
Will in order to for the deceased
to confirm the correctness of the
content. In any event, I find that the instructions were still not
finalized as indicated supra.
CONCLUSION:
[29] On the issue whether
the document purported to be the last Will and testament of the
deceased falls within the ambit of section
2(3) of the Wills Act, I
find that the document does not. The facts prove that this document
was unexecuted therefore I am not
satisfied on the evidence presented
that the document was ‘.drafted ‘ or ‘executed’
by the deceased within
the context and ambit of section 2(3) of the
Wills Act. It follows as the last issue that the applicants failed to
make out a case
for the relief. I am satisfied that the balance of
probabilities favours the third respondent’s version.
Consequently, the
application must fail.
COSTS:
[30]
The last aspect to be addressed is the issue of costs. Awarding of
costs is at the discretion of the court which must be exercised
judicially
[6]
. A just court
order is that the costs of this application including the costs of
the interlocutory application for condonation
are to be paid out of
the estate of the deceased.
Order:
[31] In the circumstances
the following order is made:
1.
Application is dismissed.
2.
The costs to be paid out of the estate of the
deceased.
MNCUBE
AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
:
On
behalf of the Applicants
:Adv.
P.A. Mabilo
Instructed
by
:Tyron
I. Pather Incorporated
771
Park Street, Sunnyside Pretoria
On
behalf of the Respondent
:Adv.
A. Coetsee
Instructed
by
:Kruger
Attorneys and Conveyancers
32
Mouton Street, Horizon, Roodepoort
Date
of Judgment
:24
March 2023
[1]
Counsel
referred to the author as Steyn J – which I was unable to
locate. It is unclear if this was a typographical error
or not.
Needless to say, I was unable to find this author despite diligent
search.
[2]
See
Wilkinson
and Another v Crawford NO and Others
2021 (4) SA 323
(CC
)
paras [69] to [70]. See Harvey NO v Crawford NO
2019 (2) SA 153
(SCA) para [53].
[3]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623(A
)
at 634E to 635C which principle provides that an applicant who seeks
final relief using motion proceedings must ,in the
event of a
dispute, accept the version set out by the opponent unless the
opponent’s allegations in the opinion of
the Court are not
bona fide disputes of facts or are far-fetched or untenable to the
extent that the Court is justified in rejecting
the allegations on
the papers. In motion proceedings, a real dispute of fact only
exists where the Court is satisfied that the
party who purports to
raise it has in the affidavit seriously and unambiguously addressed
the fact so disputed. See
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA
371
(SCA)
para13
.
See
Malan
v City of Cape Town
2014 (6) SA 315
(CC)
para
73.
[4]
See
Henriques
v Giles NO and Another; Henriques v Giles NO and Others
2010 (6) SA
51
(SCA
).
[5]
See
De
Reszke v Czeslaw v Maras and Others 2006(2) SA 277 (SCA
).
[6]
See
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3)
SA 247
(CC).
sino noindex
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