Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 336South Africa
Kgosi v Kgosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 336; 6134/2022 (23 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kgosi v Kgosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 336; 6134/2022 (23 May 2023)
Kgosi v Kgosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 336; 6134/2022 (23 May 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 6134/2022
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
DATE:
23 MAY 2023
In
the matter between:
MARTHA KERILENG
KGOSI
Applicant
and
KGANYANE LILLY
KGOSI
1
st
Respondent
ESTATE LATE RABAKI
PETRUS KGOSI
Estate
no:0[...]
2
nd
Respondent
KL KGOSI NO
Executrix of late
estate no: 0[...]
3
rd
Respondent
DEPARTMENT OF HOME
AFFAIRS
4
th
Respondent
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT PRETORIA
5
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
K
STRYDOM, AJ
Introduction:
1)
On 28 June 1986, Mr Petrus Kgosi ("the deceased") married
the Applicant in
community of property. By 2008 however the Applicant
had moved out of the house and the deceased was living with the first
Respondent.
In 2017, he "married" her in a civil ceremony,
without having divorced the Applicant. This "marriage" is
the
genesis of the disputes between Mr Kgosi's two "wives".
2)
Given the pertinent choice to conclude a civil marriage in community
of property, it
is no surprise that the Applicant was aggrieved that
the first Respondent was appointed by the Master of the High Court as
the
executrix of the estate of her late husband, following his demise
on 18 March 2021.
3)
She accordingly seeks an order setting aside this appointment by the
5
th
Respondent (“the Master”)
Relief sought
4)
The Applicant had initially, in her notice of motion sought a variety
of orders which
can be grouped into: (a) orders aimed at validating
the Applicant's marriage to the deceased and invalidating the first
Respondent's
and (b) orders aimed at the removal of the first
Respondent as the executrix of the estate of the deceased
5)
On the day of hearing, the parties had managed to narrow the issues
for determination
by agreeing to the following:
a)
The first Respondent no longer disputed the validity of the marriage
of the Applicant
to the deceased. The result was that the relief
sought in terms of prayers one and two of the notice of motion (and
add the validity
of the respective managers) fell away.
b)
The parties agreed that there was no dispute of fact on the papers.
c)
Counsel for
the Applicant, correctly, conceded that, despite the relief sought in
the notice of motion, this Court may not usurp
the discretion of the
Master by appointing the Applicant in the place of the first
Respondent. As such, the prayer in this regard
was abandoned
[1]
6)
The Applicant now sought the following relief:
a)
A declaration that the appointment of the first Respondent as the
executrix was erroneous
and therefore be set aside
b)
An order directing the Master to remove her as the executrix
7)
The parties further agreed that the first Respondent, in view of the
acceptance of
the validity of the Applicant's marriage, would argue
that the marriage of the first Respondent was a putative marriage.
The argument
was to proceed on the papers filed, without
supplementation.
8)
It, however, became clear, during the first Respondent's argument,
that she would need
to refer to evidence that was not contained in
the papers before Court. I accordingly refused to hear argument in
this regard.
As will be gleaned from the discussion below, the
determination of the putative marriage has no significant bearing on
the relief
sought at date of this hearing.
9)
Given the nature of the agreements already made between the parties,
I granted the
parties leave to supplement their papers for argument
of the putative marriage at a later stage before another Court. They
agreed
to certain timeframes for such papers to be filed and also
agreed, that if the putative marriage was proven, they would be
willing
to act as co-executors.
Relevant facts
10)
The first Respondent was appointed by the Master on the strength of
her marriage certificate on 25 March
2021. The Applicant sought
appointment on the 9
th
of April 2021 and was informed of
the first respondent’s appointment. On 14 April 2021, caused a
letter to be sent to the
Master informing it that she was in fact
married to the deceased and resultant requested it to cancel the
letter of executorship
issued to the first Respondent.
11)
On 19 April 2021 the Master wrote to the first Respondent and
indicated that it is considering removing
her as executrix on the
basis of the complaint received from the Applicant. It was indicated
that, if she failed to produce evidence
to the contrary, it was “
much
amenable
” to cancel the first Respondent's letter of
executorship and to appoint the Applicant as executrix.
12)
The Master has since sending this letter, taken no further action.
13)
On 11 May 2021, the fourth Respondent also wrote to the first
Respondent to indicate that, as her marriage
to the deceased was
bigamous, the marriage was removed from the National Population
Register.
Issues for
determination
14)
From the aforementioned facts it is evident that the Master has
performed two administrative action,
which the setting aside of each,
respectively, has a direct bearing on this matter:
a)
It appointed the first Respondent as the executor; and
b)
It took steps to remove her as executor by writing the letter
referred to supra.
15)
The following therefore stands for determination:
a) With
regards to this second action, insofar as the Master has failed to
take a decision, should an application
for review have been brought
in terms of the Promotion of Access to Justice Act, 3 of 2000
(“PAJA”)?
b) If
the answer to (a) is in the negative, should the appointment of the
first Respondent be set aside by the
Court?
Legal
framework and application
Statutory
provisions
22)
Section 54 of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 (“the
Estates Act”),
clearly demarcates the jurisdiction of the Court
and the Master, respectively, to remove an executor from a deceased
estate.
23)
The Court
may do so, for presented purposes, where it is satisfied that "
it
is undesirable that he should act as executor of the estate
concerned
."
[2]
24)
The
Master’s jurisdiction to remove an executor, in the present
matter, by process of elimination, could only be in instances
where
either the executor was incapacitated at the time of appointment or
has failed to perform her duties satisfactorily.
[3]
Either way, the Master has a duty to, before removing an executor,
send a notice by registered post setting forth the reasons for
such
removal and informing the executor that she may apply to the Court
within 30 days for an order restraining the Master from
removing
her.
[4]
Removal
by the Master and the applicability of PAJA
25)
Counsel for
the Applicant referred to the judgment in
Mlunguza
and Another v Master of the High Court and Another
[5]
in support of the contention that PAJA does not apply to S54(2)
of the Estates act. I disagree with this contention insofar
as it
espouses a rule of general application: In
Mlunguza
the pronouncement was made in the context of the Master having
removed the executor, without providing notice in terms of S54(2)
of
the Estates Act. The Master placed reliance on S3(4) of PAJA to
justify her departure from the provision. In the present matter,
the
issue pertains to the possible failure of the Master to make a
decision in terms of S54(1)(b) read with S54(2) of the Estates
Act.
26)
To answer the question posed in paragraph 17(a)
supra,
with
regards to the applicability of PAJA to the Master’s failure to
take action, it is necessary to deal with letter sent
to the first
Respondent by the Master. Simply put, can this be considered to be a
notice in terms of S54(2), which would lead to
the inference that the
Master has subsequently failed to make a decision in terms of
S54(1)(b) and therefore trigger PAJA?
27)
The letter itself does not convey a decision to remove the first
Respondent as an
executor, nor does it inform her to approach the
Court. It is therefore not in compliance with the provision.
28)
Furthermore, even though the Applicant, in her founding affidavit,
complains of the
first Respondent’s failure to perform her
duties, this was not the basis of her complaint sent to the Master.
The Master’s
reasoning for the potential removal, in
terms of the letter, is based on the bigamous marriage complained of
by the Applicant.
29)
Despite the necessary inference that the appointment of the first
Respondent was done
on the erroneous basis that she was the sole
spouse, the provisions of S54(1)(b) simply do not imbue the Master
with the authority
to remove an executor under such circumstances.
30)
The fact
that the appointment was done on an erroneous assumption, cannot be
render the executrix incapacitated at the time of appointment.
It
has, for instance, been held that where an attorney, who was at the
time suspended, was appointed as an executor (without disclosing
his
status), the Master could not remove him on the basis that he is not
fit and proper and therefore incapacitated.
[6]
31)
Accordingly, the letter sent does not constitute a notice as per the
section and,
in any event, would not have contained a competent
ground for removal of the executrix by the Master. As such there is
no basis
for a review in terms of PAJA in this regard.
Removal
by the Court
32)
With
regards to the application to this Court to remove the first
Respondent, it appears from the founding affidavit that the Applicant
bases such a removal on the fact that the first Respondent had "
no
locus standi to be so appointed
"
[7]
and is neglecting her duties as executrix.
33)
Firstly, there is no such thing as
locus standi
(in the sense
meant by the Applicant) with regards to the appointment of an
executor. In terms of S18(1) the Master may appoint
and grant letters
of executorship to any such person whom it may deem fit and proper.
The regard that it is enjoined to have to
the sole surviving spouse,
in terms of S19, only comes into play if more than one person is
nominated for recommendation to the
Master as executor. That was not
the case here.
34)
Counsel for
the Applicant also referred me to the matter of
Bobani
v Benge and Others
[8]
,
where
the Court, having found the executrix's marriage to the deceased to
have been invalid, set aside her appointment.
35)
The judgment, however, seems to have been directed primarily at the
validity of the
marriage and does not pertinently state on what basis
the executrix's appointment was set aside. In
Bobani
, the
Applicant had attempted to report the estate and wanted to be
appointed as executor, but was not afforded the opportunity
to
address the Master in this regard. In casu, the Applicant had applied
for appointment as executrix, but, following advice from
family,
chose to abide by the appointment of the first Respondent. It is
therefore distinguishable from
Bobani
, where there competing
claims for appointment.
36)
Therefore, given the provisions of S18 and S19 discussed above, the
removal as an
executrix does not flow as a matter of course from a
declaration of invalidity of a bigamous marriage.
37)
Secondly,
the first Respondent denies that she has neglected any of her duties
as the executrix and indicates that she has, for
instance, appointed
a firm of attorneys to assist her in managing the estate. Her
refusals to provide information to and to include
the Applicant in
the distribution, stemmed from her
bona
fide
belief that she was the sole spouse of the deceased and therefore was
under no obligation to share information with the first Respondent
or
to include the first Respondent in the distribution. Even though the
parties have agreed that the are no disputes of fact in
the
application, the working of the
Plascon
Evans
[9]
rule in any event require that this version be accepted.
38)
I am
appreciative of the fact that the first Respondent now admits the
validity of the Applicant's marriage in community of property
to the
deceased, however this admission does not affect the credibility of
her belief at the time of deposing of the answering
affidavit. Nor
does it render her decisions taken with regards to the estate, based
on this mistaken belief, suddenly neglectful.
Earlier this
year, in
Mailula
[10]
,
the Court, approvingly referred to the dictum in
Volkwyn
NO v Clarke & Damant
[11]
:
“
Where it is
sought to remove an executor from office it must appear that the acts
complained of are such as to stamp the executor
as a dishonest,
grossly inefficient or untrustworthy person whose future conduct can
be expected to expose the estate to actual
loss, or of administration
in a way not contemplated …”
39)
There thus being no finding of gross neglect or inefficiency on the
part of the first
Respondent, I am accordingly left to determine
whether there are other grounds that would render the continuation of
the first
Respondent as executrix, undesirable.
40)
I have
considered, in addition to the basis for the Master’s
appointment (discussed
supra
)
and the agreements reached between the parties, the relationship
between the parties. As was stated in
Mailula
[12]
:
“…
(m)ere
hostility between the executrix and other interested parties
which
does not affect the administration
….is not
sufficient ground for removal. The test is whether the continuance of
the executrix in office will prejudicially
affect the future welfare
of the estate placed in her care
.” [Underlining my own]
41)
By all accounts, the parties had a civil relationship prior to the
death of the deceased.
The first Respondent had lived with the
deceased and the children of the Applicant since 2008. She had helped
raised the children
of the Applicant. The Applicant's children, in
fact, to save the peace, had advised the Applicant to accept the
appointment of
the first Respondent.
42)
However, the die has now been cast and the parties are embroiled in
litigation. Even
their agreement to act as co-executrixes is
conditional and seems to be borne out of the probable joint
appointment by the Master
that would in any event follow if the
putative marriage were proven.
43)
Will these hostilities affect the first Respondent in her
administration of the estate?
Not being an adept soothsayer, this
Court cannot answer the question. However, that the hostilities could
influence her (at least
on a subjective level) is reasonably
foreseeable. Furthermore, considering that the legal position,
(presently) is that 50% of
the estate to be distributed belongs to
the Applicant, would it be fair to her to, given the hostilities,
entrust her portion to
an executrix who, until date of hearing,
denied her entitlement thereto? Decidedly not.
Finding
44)
Without casting any aspersions on the
bona fides
of the first
Respondent, I find that this consideration of fairness, coupled with
the probability that Applicant (in the presence
of the true state of
affairs) would probably have been appointed as executrix instead of
the first Respondent, tips the scales
in favour of setting aside the
appointment of the first Respondent.
ORDER
45)
In the result, it is ordered that:
1.
The appointment and issuance of the letters of executorship by the
fifth Respondent to the first Respondent,
to act in her capacity as
executrix of the second Respondent (the late estate of Rabaki Petrus
Kgosi) is set aside.
2.
The fifth Respondent is directed to remove the first Respondent as
the executrix of the second Respondent
and to withdraw the letters of
executorship issued to the first Respondent.
3.
The first Respondent is directed to return the
letters of executorship issued to her by the fifth Respondent to the
fifth Respondent.
4.
The first Respondent is ordered to give a full account of actions
taken during her tenure as executrix
to the fifth Respondent or the
newly appointed executor(s) as and when requested to do so by either.
5.
The first Respondent is ordered to provide all documentation in her
possession or under her control
pertaining to the second Respondent
to the fifth Respondent or the newly appointed executor(s) as and
when requested to do so by
either.
6.
The fifth Respondent is ordered to appoint a
new executor(s) or executrix(es) to the
late estate of Rabaki
Petrus Kgosi.
7.
In the event that either the Applicant, or the first Respondent, or
both contend for appointment of
executrix(es) of the second
Respondent, the party or parties applying are ordered to bring this
judgment and the recorded agreements
therein to the attention of the
fifth Respondent for its consideration in making such an appointment.
8.
The first Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicant’s party
and party costs on a High Court scale.
K STRYDOM
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
13
April 2023
Judgment
delivered
:
23
May 2023
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Counsel:
Adv
ZD Maluleke
Attorney:
B
Rikhotso attorneys
Office
1a, 1st floor Curator building
421
Pretorius street, Pretoria
For
the first and third Respondents:
Counsel:
Adv T
Sebata
Attorney:
Tisana
Madimetja Attorneys Inc
6510
Radish Close Street, The Orchards, Pretoria
[1]
Bankorp
Trust Bpk v Pienaar
1993 (4) SA 98 (A)
[2]
S54(1)(a)(v)
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
[3]
S54(1)(b)(iv)
and (v)
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
[4]
S54(2)
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
[5]
Mlunguza
and Another v Master of the High Court and Another
(21755/2018)
[2020] ZAWCHC 6
(11 February 2020) paras 44 and 45
[6]
Mlunguza
and Another v Master of the High Court and Another
(21755/2018)
[2020] ZAWCHC 6
(11 February 2020): “…
the
requirement
S18
in(1) that an executor dative be “fit and
proper” does not, I consider, go to capacity for purposes of
S54(1)(b)(iv).
”
[7]
CL 01-24
[8]
Bobani
v Benge and Others
(428/2018) [2022] ZAECBHC 8 (14 April 2022),
[9]
Plascon-Evans
(Pty) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) L
td
1984(3) SA 623 (A) at 634
[10]
Mailula
Vusi James & Another v Modiba Altevese Sir-Mone Puni &
Another
(Case No. 7692/2022) [2023] ZAGP JHC 367 (24 April 2023)
[11]
Volkwyn
NO v Clarke & Damant
1946 WLD 456
as quoted in
Mailula
supra
[12]
Mailula
note
9
supra
at para 47
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