Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 416South Africa
Deutscher Genossenschaftsund Raiffeisenverband e.V.1 / German Cooperative and Raiffeisen Confederation v Sejake and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 416; 54837/2020 (7 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Deutscher Genossenschaftsund Raiffeisenverband e.V.1 / German Cooperative and Raiffeisen Confederation v Sejake and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 416; 54837/2020 (7 June 2023)
Deutscher Genossenschaftsund Raiffeisenverband e.V.1 / German Cooperative and Raiffeisen Confederation v Sejake and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 416; 54837/2020 (7 June 2023)
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sino date 7 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Case
Number: 54837/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
7 JUNE 2023
SIGNATURE
DEUTSCHER
GENOSSENSCHAFTSUND
Applicant
RAIFFEISENVERBAND
e.V.1/GERMAN
COOPERATIVE
AND RAIFFEISEN
CONFEDERATION
[DGRV]
and
TEBOHO
MOTSEKHOANE SEJAKE
First Respondent
and
another
SC
VIVIAN AJ
1.
This is an application for sequestration. The Applicant is a
non-governmental
organisation formed in terms of the laws of Germany.
It conducts developmental programmes in South Africa. It is fully
funded and
financed from German public funds.
2.
The First Respondent is a former employee of the Applicant. The
Applicant says
that she misappropriated money from it. The Applicant
laid a charge against the First Respondent. It also issued summons
against
her for an amount of almost R1 million. The First Respondent
entered an appearance to defend the action, but did not file a plea.
Default judgment was granted against her. A warrant of execution was
issued against the First Respondent. The sheriff attempted
to execute
the warrant but rendered a
nulla bona
return of service,
meaning that the sheriff was unable to locate assets to satisfy the
warrant.
3.
The Applicant says that it has subsequently found that the First
Respondent in
fact stole even more money than it initially realised.
Accordingly, the debt owed to it is greater than the judgment debt.
4.
The failure to pay the judgment debt is an act of insolvency.
However, the Applicant
says that after receiving the
nulla bona
return, it became aware that the First Respondent is married to
the Second Respondent in community of property. It says this on the
basis that a search conducted at the Deeds Office did not reveal that
an antenuptial contract had been registered. It points out
that it
did find that immovable property is registered in the name of the
Second Respondent and that the search showed that this
immovable
property was registered on the basis that the Second Respondent is
married out of community of property.
5.
Only the Second Respondent opposes the application. The basis of his
opposition
is that he is married to the First Respondent out of
community of property. Attached to his answering affidavit are copies
of the
Respondents’ marriage certificate and their antenuptial
contract. These reveal that the Respondents signed the antenuptial
contract on 23 September 2004 before a notary public. This provided
for their marriage to be out of community of property. They
were
married on 1 November 2004. The Antenuptial Contract was registered
at the Johannesburg Deeds Office on 18 January 2005.
6.
Section 86 of the Deeds Registries Act (Act 47 of 1937; “DRA”)
provides
that antenuptial contracts must be registered in the manner
and within the time provided for in Section 87, failing which it:
“
shall be of no force or effect as against any person who is
not a party thereto.
”
7.
Section 87(1) of the DRA provides:
“
An antenuptial
contract executed in the Republic shall be attested by a notary and
shall be registered in a deeds registry within
three months after the
date of its execution or within such extended period as the court may
on application allow.
”
8.
The three-month period expired on 23 December 2004. The antenuptial
contract
was accordingly registered outside of the time period
allowed by Section 87(1).
9.
Section 88 of the DRA allows the Court to: “…
authorize
postnuptial execution of a notarial contract having the effect of an
antenuptial contract, if the terms thereof were agreed
upon between
the intended spouses before the marriage, and may order the
registration, within a specified period, of any contract
so
executed.
”
10.
Siwendu J explained:
“
Section 88
caters for a scenario where the parties to a marriage agreed to an
antenuptial contract before the marriage, but did
not execute and
register same timeously. It allows the parties to approach the court
for the postnuptial registration of the antenuptial
contract.
Although executed and registered after the marriage, it will have a
retrospective effect if sanctioned by the court.
”
[1]
11.
The effect
of these provisions of the DRA is that an antenuptial contract that
has not been registered is of no force or effect
against any person
who is not a party thereto, but is enforceable
inter
partes
.
[2]
12.
The Second Respondent says that the Respondents were unaware of the
fact that their antenuptial
contract was registered late. He learned
of this fact when his answering affidavit in this application was
being prepared. The
Respondents accordingly launched an
ex parte
application on 25 February 2021 (“the related
application”), in which they seek a declaratory order that
their antenuptial
contract is binding and of force against third
parties, alternatively an order allowing for the late registration of
the antenuptial
contract.
13.
The Respondents served a copy of the related application on the
Applicant. The Applicant has subsequently
intervened and opposes that
application. I was informed from the bar that although the affidavits
have been exchanged in the related
application, neither party has
filed heads of argument and accordingly a date for hearing has not
yet been allocated.
14.
The Applicant’s counsel recorded in his initial heads of
argument that the Applicant had
approached the Deputy Judge President
for an order that the two applications be heard together. He says
that the Second Respondent’s
legal representative objected on
the basis that this application was still undefended and opposing
affidavits had yet to be filed.
On the strength of this, the Deputy
Judge President ruled that each matter should be dealt with on its
own and according to the
state and progression of the papers filed
therein.
15.
The Second Respondent’s counsel informed me that she was not on
brief at the time. She took
an instruction from her attorney, who
apparently did not agree with the recollection of the Applicant’s
counsel.
16.
In any event, the Applicant’s counsel’s recollection does
not show that the Deputy
Judge President made a ruling that, on a
consideration of the evidence in this application, it could be heard
before the related
application. And, even if he did, that would be an
interlocutory ruling which is subject to variation on the basis of
the facts
before me.
17.
I have not
been referred to a case in which the parties signed an antenuptial
contract prior to their marriage and the antenuptial
contract was
registered, but outside of the three-month period.
[3]
I have also not found such a case. It may be, as the Second
Respondent’s counsel submits, that the
Oudekraal
principle applies and that the fact of registration of the
antenuptial contract means that it is valid until registration is set
aside.
[4]
Or it may be, as the
Applicant’s counsel submits, that the express wording of
Section 86 has the effect that the
Oudekraal
principle is excluded and that the antenuptial contract is not
enforceable against third parties. In that event, the Court has
the
power to extend the date for registration of the antenuptial
contract, which would have retrospective effect. Or it may refuse
to
do so.
18.
However, the related application is not before me. As matters stand,
I know that the Respondents
are married, but it is in dispute whether
their marriage is in or out of community of property.
19.
The dispute as to whether the Respondents are married in or out of
community of property is material
to this application. This is
because Section 17(4)(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act (Act 88 of
1984; “the MPA”) provides:
“
An application
for the sequestration of a joint estate shall be made against both
spouses: Provided that no application for the
sequestration of the
estate of a debtor shall be dismissed on the ground that such
debtor's estate is a joint estate if the applicant
satisfies the
court that despite reasonable steps taken by him he was unable to
establish whether the debtor is married in community
of property or
the name and address of the spouse of the debtor.
”
20.
The Applicant’s case is that the Respondents are married in
community of property. Accordingly,
it cited both Respondents in the
application. Although the relief sought in the notice of motion is
not clear, Mr Minnaar, who
appeared for the Applicant, indicated that
he would move for an order in terms of one of two draft orders
uploaded by the Applicant.
Primarily, the Applicant seeks an order
sequestrating the joint estate of the Respondents. This approach is
correct on the Applicant’s
version, namely that the Respondents
are married in community of property.
21.
On the other hand, if the Respondents are married out of community of
property, then the Second
Respondent is wrongly cited in these
proceedings. The appropriate order would be for the estate of the
First Respondent to be sequestrated.
22.
The proviso
to Section 17(4)(b) of the MPA was introduced into Section 17(4)(b)
by Section 11 of the Insolvency Amendment Act (Act
122 of 1993). The
intention of the legislature is to ensure that “…
both
spouses in a marriage in community of property received notice of an
application for sequestration, unless this was practically
impossible.
”
[5]
23.
Even prior
to the amendment, the full bench in
Detkor
held that where there is doubt as to the marital status of the
Respondent, the Court may not grant an order for sequestration.
[6]
This must be so: sequestration affects a person’s status. Even
a provisional sequestration order has profound effects.
24.
Accordingly, I agree with the Second Respondent’s counsel that
this matter cannot proceed
before the related application is
finalised. I will accordingly remove the matter from the roll.
25.
The matter is not out of the hands of the Applicant. As it is a party
to the related application,
it can ensure that it is enrolled for
hearing as soon as reasonably possible, either before or together
with this application.
26.
In respect of costs, the Second Respondent is seeking an indulgence.
He has also given no explanation
for his failure to timeously
progress the related application. Accordingly, I intend to order the
Second Respondent to pay the
wasted costs occasioned by the removal
of the matter from the roll.
27.
For the avoidance out doubt, I record that nothing in this judgment
should be read as deciding
whether a proper case for sequestration is
made out, whether against the First Respondent or against the
Respondents jointly. That
is a matter for the Court to consider at a
future hearing.
28.
I accordingly grant the following order:
28.1.
The application is removed from the roll.
28.2.
The Second Respondent is ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned
by the removal from
the roll.
Vivian,
AJ
Acting
Judge of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South Africa
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF:
JR
Minnaar
FOR
THE DEFENDANT:
KA
Slabbert
Date
of hearing: 30 May 2023
Date
delivered: 7 June
2023
[1]
LNM v MMM (2020/11024) [2021] ZAGPJHC 563 (11 June 2021) at para 48
[2]
Ex
parte
Spinnazze
and another NNO
1985 (3) SA 650
(A) at 666 C
[3]
It
is suggested in the Applicant’s supplementary heads of
argument that LNM v MMM,
supra
,
is in point. I do not agree. That case concerns a contract that was
concluded post-nuptially and then registered at the Deeds
Office.
Siwendu J declared the contract to be void because it was concluded
post-nuptially.
[4]
See
Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6)
SA 222 (SCA)
[5]
Absa
Bank Ltd t/a Trust Bank v Goosen
1998 (2) SA 550
(W) at 552 B
[6]
Detkor
(Pty) Ltd v Pienaar
1991 (3) SA 406
(W) at 411 I
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