Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 218South Africa
Matini v Matini and Others (20991/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 218 (23 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Matini v Matini and Others (20991/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 218 (23 March 2022)
Matini v Matini and Others (20991/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 218 (23 March 2022)
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sino date 23 March 2022
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IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
23
March 2022
Case No:
20991/2021
In
the matter between:
LONGASIZWE
BETTY
MATINI
Applicant
and
JOHANNES
TSAKANE
MATINI
First
Respondent
KHENSANI
MARGARET
MATINI
Second Respondent
KGOMOTSO
BELLA
MATINI
Third Respondent
MZAMANE
WILLIAM
KHOZA
Fourth Respondent
TSHIPA
GLADYS
KHOZA
Fifth Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS,
PRETORIA
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
LAZARUS
AJ
Introduction
and factual background
1.
This is an application for an order declaring the
sale and subsequent transfer of an immovable property from the first
respondent
to the fourth and fifth respondent unlawful and certain
consequential relief.
2.
The basis for the declarator is that the sale
agreement did not comply with
section 15(2)(a)
of the
Matrimonial
Property Act 88 of 1984
which requires a spouse married in community
of property to obtain the written consent of the other spouse to
alienate immovable
property forming part of the joint estate.
3.
It is common cause that the written consent of the
applicant, who was married to the first respondent in community of
property at
the time the sale agreement was concluded, was not
obtained as contemplated in the aforesaid question.
4.
Section 15(9)(a)
of the
Matrimonial Property Act
provides
an exception to this prohibition. In terms of this section,
when a spouse enters into a transaction with a person contrary to the
provisions of,
inter alia
,
section 15(2)(a)
and that person does not know and cannot reasonably
know that the transaction is being entered into contrary to that
provision, it
is deemed that the transaction concerned has been
entered into with the required consent.
5.
The issue before me is whether this exception is
applicable to the facts of this matter and accordingly whether the
abovementioned
sale agreement should be deemed to have been entered
into with such consent despite it being common cause that such
consent was not
in fact obtained.
6.
The relevant background appears from the
affidavits filed and may be summarised as follows.
6.1.
Prior to his marriage to the applicant, the first
respondent was the owner of the immovable property situated at [….].
The first
respondent acquired ownership of the property after the
death of his erstwhile wife to whom he was married in community of
property.
6.2.
The first respondent and the applicant were
married on 29 September 1998 in community of property.
6.3.
During or about 2004, the first respondent
approached the applicant to obtain her consent for the transfer of
the property to the
first respondent’s (now late) sister and her
husband, the fifth and fourth respondents respectively.
6.4.
According to the first respondent, the applicant’s
attitude to the proposed sale was that she wanted nothing to do with
the property
and the proposed sale was never discussed again between
the applicant and the first respondent.
6.5.
The first respondent’s version is corroborated
by the evidence of the first respondent children (the second and
third respondents
- born of his previous marriage). In their
affidavits, the second and third respondents state that prior to the
sale they, together
with the applicant and the first respondent, were
called to a meeting with their grandmother to discuss the proposed
sale of the
property. At this meeting the applicant stated that
she wanted nothing to do with the property and refused to be involved
in
any transaction regarding the property.
6.6.
At that time, the second and third respondents
lived at the property and the applicant and the first respondent
lived at another property
situated at [….].
6.7.
The intention behind the sale, as is borne out by
the subsequent sales and transfers of the property, was for the fifth
and fourth
respondents to purchase the property and sell it to the
second and third respondents once they finished their schooling and
started
working and were able to purchase it.
6.8.
According to the first respondent, the sale was a
means to preserve the property for his children as the first
respondent was in arrears
in paying the bond instalments and the
property was at risk of being auctioned by the financing bank.
6.9.
As alluded to above, the property was duly sold
and transferred to the fifth and fourth respondents during or about
2004 and was subsequently
sold and transferred to the second and
third respondents during or about 2010.
6.10.
It does not appear to be in dispute that at no
time prior or subsequent to the sale did the applicant make any
financial contribution
to the purchase or upkeep of the property.
6.11.
The applicant and the first respondent are now in
the process of getting divorced. Despite having displayed no interest
in the property
during the currency of their marriage, the applicant
now wishes for the sale and transfer of the property to the fifth and
sixth
respondents and the subsequent sale and transfer of the
property to the second and third respondents to be declared unlawful
and
for the property to be declared part of the joint estate which is
to be divided between them in the divorce proceedings.
Discussion
7.
Recently, in Vuyeka v Ntshane and Others
(unreported Case No. 518/2019
[2020] ZASCA 167
(11 December 2020),
the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with the consequences of the
failure to acquire consent in terms of
section 15
of the
Matrimonial
Property Act.
8.
ANG="en-GB">The court quoted with approval the following
passages from an earlier decision of the same court (Marais NO and
Another
v Maposa and Others [2020] ZASCA 23; 2020 (5) SA 111 (SCA))
dealing with the effect and operation of
section 15
of the
Matrimonial Property Act:
‘
[26]
The effect of
s 15
may be summarized as follows. First, as a general
rule, a spouse married in community of property “may perform any
juristic act
in connection with the joint estate without the consent
of the other spouse”. Secondly, there are exceptions to the general
rule.
In terms of
ss 15(2)
and (3), a spouse “shall not” enter
into any of the transactions listed in these subsections without the
consent of the other
spouse. Subject to what is said about the effect
of
s 15(9)(a)
, if a spouse does so, the transaction is unlawful, and
is void and unenforceable. This, it seems to me, flows from what
Innes CJ,
in Schierhout v Minister of Justice, called a “fundamental
principle of our law”, namely, that “a thing done contrary to the
direct prohibition of the law is void and of no effect”. Thirdly,
if a listed transaction is entered into without the consent of
the
non-contracting spouse, that transaction will nonetheless be valid
and enforceable if the third party did not know and could
not
reasonably have known of the lack of consent. While the consent
requirement is designed to provide protection to the non-contracting
spouse against maladministration of the joint estate by the
contracting spouse, the “deemed consent” provision in
s 15(9)(a)
is intended to protect the interests of a bona fide third party who
contracts with that spouse.
[27]
Section 15
thus seeks to strike a balance between the interests of
the non-consenting spouse, on the one hand, and the bona fide third
party,
on the other …
[28]
A third party to a transaction contemplated by
ss 15(2)
or (3) that
is entered into without the consent of the non-contracting spouse is
required, in order for consent to be deemed and
for the transaction
to be enforceable, to establish two things: first, that he or she did
not know that consent was lacking; and
secondly, that he or she could
not reasonably have known that consent had not been given. In terms
of the general principle that
the party who asserts a particular
state of affairs is generally required to prove it, the burden of
bringing
s 15(9)(a)
into play rests on the party seeking to rely on
the validity of the transaction.
[29]
The reference to reasonableness in the phrase “cannot reasonably
know” imports an objective standard into the proof of this
element:
it must be established with reference to the standard of the
reasonable person, in terms of what the reasonable person would
do in
the circumstances and the conclusion that the reasonable person would
draw.
[30]
In other words, a duty is placed on the party seeking to rely on
deemed consent to make reasonable enquiries …
9.
It is evident from the passages quoted above that
the burden of bringing
section 15(9)(a)
into play rests on the first
respondent in the present matter. It is the first respondent who is
seeking to rely on the validity
of the sale agreement concluded
between himself and the fifth and sixth respondents.
10.
The difficulty the first respondent faces in the
present matter, however, is that notwithstanding a notice of
opposition having initially
been filed on behalf of the fourth and
fifth respondents, the attorneys representing these respondents
subsequently withdrew as attorneys
of record and no affidavits have
been filed on behalf of the fourth and fifth respondents.
11.
The only evidence of what the fourth or fifth
respondents knew or may reasonably be assumed to have known is that
the applicant and
first respondent were married and, insofar as the
proposed sale of the property is concerned, that the applicant wanted
nothing to
do with the property and refused to be involved in any
transaction regarding the property.
12.
It is also important to emphasise that the fifth
respondent was the sister of the first respondent and was accordingly
not in the
position of a third party who has no knowledge of the
circumstances of the spouse with whom he or she is contracting. The
present
case is, however, distinguishable from the case of Visser v
Hull and Others
2010 (1) SA 521
(WCC), where the third parties were
also relatives of the contracting spouse, for in that case the
evidence was clear that the spouse
and the third parties had
fraudulently connived with each other to prejudice the other spouse’s
interests. There is no evidence
in the present matter that the first
respondent’s conduct was in any way designed to prejudice the
interests of the applicant.
13.
To return to the test set out in Marais’ case
and endorsed in the Vuyeka case as quoted above, the question is
whether it is reasonable
to assume that the fourth or fifth
respondents knew that consent for the proposed sale was lacking and
could not reasonably have
known that consent had not been given.
14.
Notwithstanding the scant evidence available, I am
of the view that since the fourth and fifth respondents knew that the
applicant
wanted nothing to do with the property, it was reasonable
for them to have assumed that the applicant would have had no
objection
to the first respondent entering into a transaction to
dispose of the property. It was accordingly reasonable for the fourth
and
fifth respondents to have assumed that whatever consent the first
respondent needed to deal with the property had been obtained.
15.
I am accordingly satisfied that the sale agreement
concluded between the first respondent and the fourth and fifth
respondent falls
within the ambit of
section 15(9)(a)
of the
Matrimonial Property Act and
must accordingly be deemed to have been
entered into with the consent of the applicant.
Order
16.
In the result the following order is granted:
16.1.
The application is dismissed with costs
Lazarus AJ
Acting Judge of the High Court,
Gauteng Division Pretoria
For
the Applicant: V Mukwevho
Instructed
by:
Shapiro Ledwaba Inc
For
the First, Second and Third Respondent: K
Mhlanga
Instructed
by:
Nkosi SP Inc
Date
of hearing: 20 October 2021
Date
of judgment: 23 March 2022
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