Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1764South Africa
Motaung v Government Employees Pension Fund (B39013/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1764 (9 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Motaung v Government Employees Pension Fund (B39013/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1764 (9 October 2023)
Motaung v Government Employees Pension Fund (B39013/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1764 (9 October 2023)
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sino date 9 October 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: B39013/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGE: NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
9 October 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MAMOKI
EMILY
MOTAUNG
Applicant
and
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
Respondent
Heard:
02 October 2023
Delivered:
This Judgment and Order was handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties’
representatives by email and uploaded on
CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14h00 on
09 October 2023.
JUDGEMENT
LE
GRANGE AJ:
[1]
Before me came an application for an order declaring
certain
periods:-
(a)
16 January 1973 - 30 December 1974 (Prayer
1); and
(b)
1 June 1976 - 31 January 2014 (Prayer 2)
to be accepted and
utilized as the periods of pensionable service of the applicant, with
consequential relief (i.e. Prayers 3 and
4 to ensure that payment of
pension is effected accordingly).
[2]
At the start of the proceedings the applicant abandoned
Prayer 1.
Prayer 2
[3]
It is not in dispute that the respondent has (and had)
regard of the
period 1 August 1980 till retirement on 31 January 2014, the periods
of pensionable service, in terms of which payments
were and are being
made.
[4]
What remains for adjudication is the period prior thereto,
being 1
June 1976 – 31 July 1980, which is in excess of four years’
pension.
[5]
It is also
not in dispute that the applicant was reappointed
[1]
(after her resignation in 30 December 1974) on 1 June 1976.
[6]
The only remaining (two part) question, before this Court,
is whether
the applicant has proven that she has been:-
(a)
in ‘continues service’; and
(b)
‘a contributory member’ of the
Fund (or as in this case,
of the previous Fund)
during the period 1 June
1976 – 31 January 2014.
Contributory member
[7]
That the applicant were ‘a contributory member’
has been
admitted by the respondent in no uncertain terms in paragraph 15 and
27 of its answering affidavit which reads:
‘
15. It
is also not disputed that the Applicant was … from 1 June 1976
up until the Previous Fund merged its assets
and liabilities with the
Fund effective 1 May 1996
(which postdates 1 August 1980 hence
being continues during these periods)
after the date of inception
a contributory member of the Previous Fund. (Insert made)
. . . .
27.
Applicant was, at least for the period 1 June 1976 to 31 January
2014, a contributory member of the Previous
Fund.’
[8]
In argument, counsel for the respondent (ultimately)
conceded that
the words used above does constitute an admission per se of the fact
that applicant was a contributory member in
that period. He
however contended that as these paras formed part of the introduction
to the respondent’s defence,
and has not been in answer to any
specific allegation ad seriatim, that it should not be interpreted as
such, especially when regard
is had to the answering affidavit as a
whole, with specific reference to para 50.3. thereof.
[9]
This Court is not so convinced.
[10]
Firstly, after the deponent’s admission (in para 15) that the
applicant
was a contributory member in that period he continues:-
‘
16
For the reasons that follow, I respectfully submit, however, that the
Applicant has no legal right against
the GEPF for the relief sought
in respect of the First Claim and the Second Claim.’
and then sets off (from
para 17) explaining the relevant rules and the act and the fact that
no claim could be entertained if the
service were not ‘continues’,
which it avers it was not.
[11]
Secondly, the relevant averments in para 8.3 of the founding
affidavit
read with the answer in paragraph 50 needs scrutiny.
It reads:
Founding Affidavit
‘
8.3. The
Applicant was, subsequently
to her termination of
employment, reemployed as an educator on the 1
st
of June 1976 as is evident from the attached letter of appointment
marked Annexure “MEM3”. The Applicant was appointed
on
permanent basis and was admitted to pension fund as a contributing
member from her date of appointment that is, 01
st
June 1976.’
Answering Affidavit
‘
50.1
the fund does not dispute that the applicant was
employed by her erstwhile employer during the periods as alleged.
…
50.3 In
relation to the Second Claim, the Fund denies that the Applicant has
proven that for the period 1 June
1976 to 31 July 1980 that she was a
contributory member of the Previous Fund and that her former employer
had paid monthly contributions
in respect of her to the Previous Fund
during the said period. Annexures “MEM3” and “MEM4”
is simply
not decisive proof of this.’
[12]
In litigation, a party is at liberty to admit to an allegation
notwithstanding
the fact that its opponent has not proven the said
allegation, or could not do so at all.
[13]
In the premises, the fact that the respondent ‘denies that the
Applicant has not proven’ that the applicant was not a
contributory member, is neither here nor there in the light of its
own admission to the said fact.
[14]
It is further trite law (considering the well-known purpose of
affidavits
in motion proceedings) that:-
‘
An affidavit or
sworn statement is a document by means of which sworn evidence is put
before a court in written form. An amendment
of an affidavit
would amount to a change of evidence which had been given on oath and
amendment thereof cannot be allowed by way
of mere notice under the
subrule:
a
party who wishes to change his evidence given on oath must do so on
oath, if necessary by way of a further affidavit
.’
[2]
(Emphasis added)
[15]
The respondent elected to leave this Court with this clear admission
under oath and intact.
Continues
service
[16]
It cannot logically be disputed that the service was not continues.
On
the respondent’s own version there were ‘continues
service’ from 1 August 1980 till retirement, which period
overlap with the admitted (in para 3 supra) period 1 June 1976 –
1 May 1996, to which it made payments due to it being continues.
This aspect was rightly so not taken further in argument.
Conclusion
[17]
In the premises this Court finds that the applicant were in
‘continues
service’ and ‘a contributory member’
of the Fund (or as in this case, of the previous Fund) during the
period
1 June 1976 – 31 January 2014 and is therefore entitled
to pension for that period.
Order
[18]
In the result I made the following order:-
1.
The respondent is ordered to utilise the date of
0
1 June 1976 to 31 January 2014 as the
pensionable
service date in calculating the gratuity and pension benefits payable
to the applicant.
2.
In order to give effect to 1 above, the respondent
is directed to take all reasonable steps to procure the necessary tax
directives
from SARS and ensure that the payment of the recalculated
gratuity is made to the applicant within 90 days of the date of this
Order.
3.
The respondent is ordered to increase the
subsequent monthly pension payments payable to the applicant in
accordance with the calculation
made in terms of paragraph 2 above.
4.
The respondent is to pay the costs of the
application.
AJ le Grange
Acting Judge
APPEARANCES
APPLICANT:
JR
Kgarimetsa
of
JR Kgarimetsa Attorneys
RESPONDENT:
Adv.
S Khumalo SC
Instructed
by Bowman Gilfillan Inc.
[1]
Annexure
“
MEM
3” to the founding affidavit.
[2]
See
Uniform Rule 28 in Erasmus Superior Court Practice
.
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