Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 558South Africa
Shongwe and Another v Meyiwa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 558; 58823/2021 (17 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Shongwe and Another v Meyiwa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 558; 58823/2021 (17 July 2023)
Shongwe and Another v Meyiwa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 558; 58823/2021 (17 July 2023)
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sino date 17 July 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 58823/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
Date: 17 July 2023
Signature
In
the matter between:
LUNGILE
H. SHONGWE
1
st
Applicant
LUNGILE
H. SHONGWE
N.O.
2
nd
Applicant
And
FIKELEPHI
A. MEYIWA
1
st
Respondent
REGISTAR
OF DEED:
PRETORIA
2
nd
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT:
JOHANNESBURG
3
rd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SETHUSHA-SHONGWE
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed motion application under part B in which Ms
Lungile
Happiness Shongwe, herein referred to as the applicant,
brings the application in her personal capacity and as the executor
of
the deceased estate of Themba Joseph Shongwe (The deceased). The
part A relief sought by the applicant was granted by agreement
on 20
December 2021 wherein the 1
st
Respondent was interdicted
from selling the immovable property pending the finalization of part
B.
[2]
The applicant seeks the following relief in terms of part B of the
notice
of motion:
(i)
“That the donation of R3 500 000.00 (three million five
thousand rand) made by the deceased and used to purchase an immovable
property on behalf of the 1
st
Respondent situated at
9[...] B[...] Street, Moreleta Park, Pretoria and known as erf 5[...]
Moreleta Park extension 3[...] Township,
Gauteng province, be
declared null and void.
(ii)
That the immovable property aforementioned be sold and then proceed
thereof
be paid in the deceased estate of Themba Joseph Shongwe
herein referred to as Mr Shongwe within 15 (fifteen) days of granting
this
order.
(iii)
Alternatively, prayer 2 above that the 1
st
Respondent pays
to the deceased estate Mr Shongwe the sum of R3 500 000.00 received
as a donation for the purpose of the property
within 15 days of the
granting of this order.”
[3]
Ms Fikelephi Meyiwa herein referred to as the 1
st
Respondent is opposed to the application on the following grounds;
(i)
That the immovable property referred above was bought and registered
in her name as their family home with the deceased.
(ii)
That the company assets used by the deceased to purchase the
immovable
did not form part of the joint estate with the 1
st
Applicant. The money belonged to the company as a separate legal
entity. And that the applicant doesn’t have locus standi
to sue
on behalf of the company as a separate entity.
Background
[4]
The Applicant and the deceased were married in community of property
in
June 1994. The marriage subsisted until it was dissolved by the
death of Mr Shongwe. The deceased died on 28 July 2021 after a short
illness in hospital.
[5]
During the course of the marriage, the deceased and the Applicants
acquired
various businesses, including 311 Acquisitions (pty) Ltd.
This company purchased and renovated properties prior to selling
them.
They each owned 50% half shares in all the companies. They were
both directors, with the deceased being the managing director, while
the applicant was also involved in the management running of the
companies.
[6]
On 15 November 2021, the deceased used the company’s assets to
purchase
the aforementioned immovable property for the 1
st
Respondent. The property was purchased without the knowledge and
consent of the applicant.
[7]
The Applicant submits that the deceased is prohibited in terms of the
marriage in community of property to donate monies belonging to joint
estate to third parties in this instance the 1
st
Respondent without her consent. It is alleged that the monies
belonging to 311 Acquisitions(pty) Ltd form part of the joint estate.
[8]
Further, the Applicant submits that the joint estate between herself
and
the deceased has no financial obligation over the 1
st
Respondent, same applies to the business assets.
[9]
The Applicant submits that she was not aware, nor had she consented
to
the donation made to the 1
st
Respondent. When the
property was purchased, she made a further payment of R100 000 (one
hundred thousand) to the conveyancers
as per instruction of the
deceased. She was informed by the deceased that they acquired the
property for purposes of their business
as usual. The company was not
a complicated and sophisticated business, it was a joint business of
husband and wife with equal
shares.
[10]
The
Applicant submits that the company being (pty) Ltd remains an asset
in the joint estate between herself and the deceased. Therefore,
the
company’s interest forms part of the assets within the
description of assets under section 15 (2) (a) to (d) of the
Matrimonial Property Act.
[1]
[11]
The Applicant contends that the issue relating to the purported
customary marriage was
already dealt with on 30 July 2021 by the
urgent application court before Van der Schyff J who concluded that
the deceased and
the 1
st
Respondent were involved in a
cohabitation relationship and that the extra marital relationship
between the deceased and the 1
st
Respondent was not a
marriage. The 1st Respondent did not appeal the order by Van der
Schyff J. The Applicant submits that the
deceased could not have
concluded a valid customary marriage whilst being a spouse in a
subsisting civil marriage.
[12]
The Applicant submits that the 1
st
Respondent and the
deceased violated the provision of section 3 (2) of Recognition of
the customary Marriage Act which state that,
save as provided in
section 10 (1), no spouse in a customary marriage shall be competent
to enter a marriage under marriage Act
of 1962 (Act No 25 of 1961)
during subsistence of such customary marriage.
[13]
It is the Applicant’s contention that 311 Acquisition (Pty) Ltd
Company belonged
to both the deceased and herself. The deceased was
never a sole director of the company and the benefit of the company
belonged
to both. As such any transactions performed on behalf of the
company ought to have been authorized by herself as the deceased’s
wife and co-owner.
[14]
The 1
st
Respondent contends that she lived with the deceased for a
significant period of time as husband and wife in a customary
marriage
in which lobola was paid and the marriage was celebrated and
she was introduced to the family of the Shongwe. The Applicant was
aware and approved the relationship between her and the deceased. The
1
st
Respondent dispute that the customary marriage between herself and
the deceased was null and void as argued by the Applicant. She
further denies that the urgent court before Van der Schyff J dealt
with this issue pertaining to the customary marriage.
[15]
The
1
st
Respondent argued that the matter should be referred to trial, to
determine the existence of a customary union or lack thereof
as
opposed to motion proceedings on the basis that the applicant
is raising issues relating to administration of estate
and
matrimonial law.
[2]
[16]
The
1
st
Respondent argued that the money used to purchase the property was
the assets of the company and not of any individual member or
joint
estate and made reference to
Dadoo
Ltd v Krugersdorp Municipality
[3]
,
the court found that the property vests in the company and cannot be
regarded as vesting in any or all the members of the company.
[17]
Further
reference was made to
Salman
v Salman Co Ltd
[4]
,
the court found that once a company is legally incorporated it must
be treated like any other independent person with its rights
and
liabilities appropriate to it.
[18]
1
st
Respondent further argued that the joint estate that the applicants
are placing reliance on section 15 (3) (c) of the matrimonial
property Act, the court should find it to be misplaced. Thus the
money used to buy the immovable property emanated from the company’s
cash assets.
[19]
Further, section 15 (6) of the matrimonial
property Act states that the provisions of paragraph (b), (c), (f),
(g) and (h) of subsection
(2) do not apply where an act contemplated
in those paragraphs is performed by a spouse in the ordinary course
of his profession,
trade or business, as such, no consent was
required from the 1
st
Applicant by the deceased. The immovable property was purchased by
the deceased in the ordinary course of his profession, trade
and
business.
[20]
The Respondent submits further that the
property doesn’t qualify as a donation in terms of section 15
(3) (c) of the Matrimonial
Property Act. In that the property was
bought using the assets of the juristic person. The transaction
cannot be null and void.
The property was bought with intended
purpose of being a home of the 1
st
Respondent and deceased as they lived together in a rented property
as husband and wife. Irrespective of the 1
st
Respondent being a customary wife to the deceased, the couple were in
a permanent relationship with full knowledge of the first
Applicant.
[21]
What is to be determined is whether there
is a
bona fide
dispute of facts which needs to be ventilated by way of oral evidence
in an action proceeding or whether the facts in disputes
raised
relates only to a point of law which can be determined in a motion
proceedings.
Discussion
[22]
It
is trite law that where parties have a dispute about facts, the
matter must be handled in terms of action proceedings. In
Frank
v Ohlssons Cape Brewories Ltd
[5]
the
court stated that where the parties’ dispute is grounded merely
on content of the law then they should pursue the shorter
and
comparatively inexpensive motion procedure.
[23]
The
famous case of
Plascon
Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (pty) Ltd
[6]
sets out the approach to determining the facts as follow;
“
It
is correct that, wherein proceedings on notice of motion disputes of
fact have arisen on the affidavits, a final order, whether
it be an
interdict or some other form of relief, may be granted if those facts
averred in the applicant’s affidavits which
have been admitted
by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by the respondent,
justify such an order. The power of the
court to give such final
relief on the papers before it is, however not confined to such
situation. In certain instances, the denial
by respondent of a fact
alleged by the applicant may not be such as to raise a real, genuine
or bona fide dispute of fact, if in
such case the respondent has not
availed himself of his right to apply for the deponents concerned to
be called for cross-examination
under Rule 6 (5)(g) of the uniform
Rules of court, and the court is satisfied as to the inherent
credibility of the applicant’s
factual averment, it may proceed
on the basis of the correctness thereof and include this fact among
those upon which it determines
whether the applicant is entitled to
the final relief which he seeks. Moreover, there may be exceptions to
this general rule, as
for example, where the allegations or denials
of the respondent are so farfetched or clearly untenable that the
court is justified
in rejecting them merely on the papers.”
[7]
[24]
The
methodology for determining whether there exists a bona fide dispute
of facts was set out in the case of
Wightmam
t/a JW v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[8]
where the court stated as follows;
[25]
“
[11] The first task is
accordingly to identify the facts of the alleged spoliation on the
basis of which the legal disputes are
to be decided. If one is to
take the respondents' answering affidavit at face value, the truth
about the preceding events lies
concealed behind insoluble disputes.
On that basis the appellant's application was bound to fail. Bozalek
J thought that the court
was justified in subjecting the apparent
disputes to closer scrutiny. When he did so he concluded that many of
the disputes were
not real, genuine or bona fide. For the reasons
which follow I respectfully agree with the learned judge.
[12]
Recognizing that the truth almost always lies beyond mere linguistic
determination the courts have said that an applicant who
seeks final
relief on motion must, in the event of conflict, accept the version
set up by his opponent unless the latter's allegations
are, in the
opinion of the court, not such as to raise a real, genuine or bona
fide dispute of fact or are so far-fetched or clearly
untenable that
the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the papers . .
.”
[9]
[26]
Having considered the above authorities,
the court has to consider whether the facts not in disputes, in their
totality are sufficient
enough to grant the order, if so then the
court must grant the order. The court will then determine whether the
disputed facts
themselves constitute a genuine and real dispute of
facts in circumstances where it is appropriate to do so.
[27]
Turning to whether a valid marriage exists
between the 1
st
Respondent and the deceased. The 1
st
Respondent clearly set out that she intends to challenge the
constitutionality of the law as it stands as it does not recognize
her union with the deceased The issue whether the applicant was aware
of the existence of this “customary union” is
immaterial
and it’s found not to be a serious dispute.
[28]
The dispute of fact arises on whether the
immovable property purchased for the 1
st
Respondent was a donation in terms of Matrimonial Property Act or it
was a family home intended for her permanent stay with the
deceased.
[29]
A consideration is to be made
whether the facts in dispute have a bearing on the facts not in
dispute. The question is, can the
payment be said to be a donation as
provided in the Matrimonial Property Act?
[30]
Section 15 (3)(c) of the Matrimonial
Property Act provides the following;
“
(3)
A spouse shall not without the consent of the other spouse –
(c) donate to another
person any asset of the joint estate or alienate such an asset
without value, excluding in assets of which
the donation or
alienation does not and probably will not unreasonably prejudice the
interest of the other spouse in the joint
estate and which is not
contrary to provisions of subsection (2) or paragraph (a) of this
subsection”
[31]
The
Applicant relies on
Marais
Maposa and Others
[10]
to make the point that an executrix has
successfully been able to obtain the relief in similar circumstances.
This is a case where a wife found out that her deceased husband had
donated a membership interest in a business, she jointly owned
with
him without her consent. The Supreme Court of Appeal held that such a
donation was invalid as it prejudices the deceased’s
wife by
alienating the majority of the joint estate without value leaving
very little in the remainder of the estate.
[32]
In my view this matter is distinguishable
from the
Marais
case mentioned
supra
in that in the current case the money is in dispute and it is the
applicant’s contention that the money used to purchase
a house
should be declared part of the joint estate. As opposed to Marais’s
case the issue was whether there could be said
to be deemed consent
in terms of section 15 (a) of the Matrimonial Property Act. The issue
whether there was alienation of an asset
belonging to the joint
estate was common cause. Further the case was concerned with a
membership interest of the company rather
than an asset belonging to
the company. The parallel in this case would be if the deceased had
donated to the 1
st
Respondent the shares of the company 311 Acquisition (Pty) Ltd which
belonged to the joint estate. That is not the case, in this
matter it
is money belonging to the company itself rather than an ownership
stake in the company that must be looked at. For these
reasons, this
authority does not bind this court.
[33]
In
my view, the legal status of the assets belonging to the company in
this instance 311 Acquisitions (Pty) Ltd, I find it to be
a juristic
person with all the powers of a person except to the extent that such
power is limited as per Companies Act.
[11]
[34]
The
applicant as a 50% shareholder of 311 Acquisition (Pty) Ltd is a
shareholder that is a holder of ownership rights of the company
but
not the assets of the company. See in this regard; Hoexter ACJ in
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Ltd v Distillers Corporation (SA) Ltd
[12]
“…
Nor
has a shareholder any right or title to any of the other assets
belonging to the company. I refer to other assets, because the
profits realised by the business of the company form part of its
assets. The fact that the shareholder is entitled to an aliquot
share
in the distribution of the surplus assets when the company is wound
up proves that he is financially interested in the success
or failure
of the company but not that he has any right or title to any assets
of the company. In short, a shareholder has a proprietary
interest in
the company, but not in the business of the company. (See Gower on
Modern Company Law, 2nd. ed. at p. 321; Macaura
v Northern Assurance
Co.,
133 L.T.R. 152
at pp. 154 - 156; Goldberg, N.O v P. J. Joubert
Ltd.,
1960 (1) SA 521
(T) ).”
[13]
[35]
I
therefore find that it is the shares that belong to the joint estate
as part of the company.
[14]
The applicant still holds her 50% share of 311 Acquisition (Pty) Ltd,
the company and so does the estate of the deceased.
As such it cannot
be said that this immovable property amounted to a donation of an
asset of the joint estate.
[36]
However, there are instances where the
separate legal personality may be ignored by a court. In the present
case there is no such
application made before me and those instances
require the company itself to be party to the proceedings. This is
not the case
here. I therefore find that the applicant’s
reliance on section 15 (3) (c) of the Matrimonial Property Act is
misplaced.
I further find that the Companies exists as separate legal
entities. Thus, it is a separation which I do not doubt that it aimed
at providing benefits for the applicant and deceased in creating some
distance between their estate and that belonging to the company.
It
is separation that exists both when it impairs the applicant. The
assets of the company cannot be said to form part of the joint
estate
of the parties. They are not real rights owned by the estate in the
same way the shares of the company are.
[37]
Having considered all factors placed before
me, the relief sought by the applicants is bound to fail. I make the
following order:
[38]
The application is dismissed with costs.
[39]
The interdict granted against the 1
st
Respondent on part A is therefore discharged.
N.C.
SETHUSHA-SHONGWE
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Appearances
Counsel for the
Appellant:
Advocate Kela
(douglas@kelalaw.co.za)
Instructed by:
T Hadebe Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent:
Advocate J.P
Mthembu
Instructed by:
Langa Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
05 May 2023
Date of judgment:
17 July 2023
Judgment
transmitted electronically
[1]
88
of 1984.
[2]
Matrimonial
Property Act 88 of 1984
.
[3]
Dadoo
V Krugersdorp 1920 AD.
[4]
Salmon
v Salmon CO Ltd
1897
AC 22.
[5]
1924
AD 289
at page 294
[6]
Plascon
Evans V Van Riebeck paints pty (Ltd)
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
A.
[7]
At
634H – 635C
[8]
Wightman
t/a JW v Headfour (pty) & Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA)
[9]
Id
at para 11 -12
[10]
Marais
V Maposa & Others
2020 (5) SA 111 (SCA)
[11]
Frank
1924 AD 289
at page 294
[12]
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Ltd V Distillers Corporation SA Ltd
1962 (1) SA 458
A.
[13]
Id
at pp 471 – 472.
[14]
Section
1 of the Companies Act
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